Description

Book Synopsis
Peter Iver Kaufman is Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA, and holds the George Matthews and Virginia Brinkley Modlin Chair in Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond, USA.

Trade Review
Kaufman presents a rich, dense amount of quality content and context. I found new illuminating insights, quotations, and cross-references on most pages. * Reading Religion *
Peter Kaufman is one of our most venerable interpreters of Augustine’s political thought. In this creative volume, he continues his quarrel with Augustine’s optimists through a series of illuminating and provocative forays into Agamben and Arendt. Kaufman’s communitarian alternative may be the antidote we need for these cynical and lonely times. * Gregory W. Lee, Associate Professor of Theology and Urban Studies, Wheaton College, USA *
In a creative juxtaposition that leverages Augustine’s political theology for both modern and postmodern critiques of citizenship and sovereignty, Kaufman has managed to locate in the early Christian monastic movement some paradigms of countercultural identity formation in the figure of the practicing Christian who lives as a pilgrim, exile, and “other.” Augustine is here interpreted as a theologian whose early, short-lived fantasy of an alternative community at Cassiacum left an indelible imprint on his imagination, even as he became a central figure in the shaping and definition of what Christian “conformity” should look like. This is a study that will challenge many assumptions of patristic scholars, one that recuperates Augustine as a thinker who can be placed in a critical tradition of resistance and non-conformity. * W. Scott Blanchard, Professor of English, Misericordia University, USA *
This volume is a great addition to the series, Reading Augustine edited by Miles Hollingworth ... The genius of this book lies in its invitational style. It forces nothing on Augustine, and does not force Augustine on anyone. * Augustiniana *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Preface Chapter 1: Augustine and Agamben Chapter 2: Glory, Glory: Agamben: The Coming Overcoming Chapter 3: Arendt’s Augustine: To Augustine and Not to Augustine Index

On Agamben Arendt Christianity and the Dark Arts

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    A Paperback / softback by Dr Peter Iver Kaufman

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      Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
      Publication Date: 17/10/2019
      ISBN13: 9780567682758, 978-0567682758
      ISBN10: 0567682757

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Peter Iver Kaufman is Professor Emeritus at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA, and holds the George Matthews and Virginia Brinkley Modlin Chair in Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond, USA.

      Trade Review
      Kaufman presents a rich, dense amount of quality content and context. I found new illuminating insights, quotations, and cross-references on most pages. * Reading Religion *
      Peter Kaufman is one of our most venerable interpreters of Augustine’s political thought. In this creative volume, he continues his quarrel with Augustine’s optimists through a series of illuminating and provocative forays into Agamben and Arendt. Kaufman’s communitarian alternative may be the antidote we need for these cynical and lonely times. * Gregory W. Lee, Associate Professor of Theology and Urban Studies, Wheaton College, USA *
      In a creative juxtaposition that leverages Augustine’s political theology for both modern and postmodern critiques of citizenship and sovereignty, Kaufman has managed to locate in the early Christian monastic movement some paradigms of countercultural identity formation in the figure of the practicing Christian who lives as a pilgrim, exile, and “other.” Augustine is here interpreted as a theologian whose early, short-lived fantasy of an alternative community at Cassiacum left an indelible imprint on his imagination, even as he became a central figure in the shaping and definition of what Christian “conformity” should look like. This is a study that will challenge many assumptions of patristic scholars, one that recuperates Augustine as a thinker who can be placed in a critical tradition of resistance and non-conformity. * W. Scott Blanchard, Professor of English, Misericordia University, USA *
      This volume is a great addition to the series, Reading Augustine edited by Miles Hollingworth ... The genius of this book lies in its invitational style. It forces nothing on Augustine, and does not force Augustine on anyone. * Augustiniana *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Preface Chapter 1: Augustine and Agamben Chapter 2: Glory, Glory: Agamben: The Coming Overcoming Chapter 3: Arendt’s Augustine: To Augustine and Not to Augustine Index

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