Description

Book Synopsis
Reinhold Niebuhr & Non-Utopian Liberalism - Beyond Illusion & Despair

Trade Review
"One of the many virtues of Eyal Naveh's splendid work is that it places Niebuhr's thought in a broad intellectual context. By examining a wide-ranging group of writers and intellectuals who commented on Niebuhr's work, Naveh succeeds, as no other scholar has, in explaining the nature of the 'discourse' that arose around the central concept of non-utopian liberalism. Naveh sheds light on how Niebuhr came to reject the notion that people were essentially rational and beneficent, a notion he considered overly idealistic and sentimental... By examining the discourse that developed around Niebuhr's central ideas, this book helps explain much about the changing contours of American thought in the twentieth century. Reinhold Niebuhr died in 1971; thirty years later the World Trade Center in New York City was destroyed by terrorists. In the aftermath of September 11, Naveh explains, Niebuhr's insight into situations of crisis can indeed invigorate American politics and culture, and may yet serve as an antidote to the illusions and sense of complacency that have too frequently dominated American life in recent decades." -- From the Foreword by Professor Richard Polenberg, Cornell University.
"The rise of neoconservatism and postmodern radicalism at the end of the century suppressed the reform-minded liberals. The enthusiasts for the relatively utopian liberation theology eclipsed Niebuhr's influence in theology in many places. The erosion of the mainline liberal churches by the loss of their children from the church weakened the base for Niebuhr's type of neoliberal theology. The rise of evangelical and fundamentalist political movements also decreased the influence of Niebuhrian paradigms. However, Naveh sees ways that the mythological liberalism of Niebuhr shares common ground with much of postmodern epistemology while avoiding its relativism. Naveh's own sense of politically fit discourse, in the end, sees that Niebuhr's nonutopian liberalism transcends the particularities of its origins and has continued vitality for the post-9/11 American republic. Niebuhr is quintessentially American in his liberal pragmatism, which Naveh celebrates. Naveh's book is the only one to focus on Niebuhr's critique of utopianism as a motif for a book-length study. The study is accurate in what it presents, and the concluding chapters on the legacy of Niebuhr present interesting interpretations." -- The Journal of Religion.

Table of Contents
Contents: Foreword by Richard Polenberg; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Liberalism and Its Discontents in a Time of Crisis; Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Beginning of a Non-Utopian Discourse; Divine Ethics and a Deficient Mankind; The Limits of Knowledge; Pacifism, Intervention, and the Nazi Menace; Total War and Tragic Victory; From Precarious Peace to Stable Cold War; Irony', Non Utopia' and Dialectical Liberalism' in the 1950s; On the Threshold of a New Utopia: Liberal Experiments and Radical Illusions in the 1960s; The Legacy: Non-Utopian Discourse after Niebuhr; Epilogue: The Open-ended Course of Non-Utopian Liberalism; Index.

Reinhold Niebuhr and Non-Utopian Liberalism:

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    A Hardback by Eyal Naveh

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      View other formats and editions of Reinhold Niebuhr and Non-Utopian Liberalism: by Eyal Naveh

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2002
      ISBN13: 9781903900048, 978-1903900048
      ISBN10: 1903900042

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Reinhold Niebuhr & Non-Utopian Liberalism - Beyond Illusion & Despair

      Trade Review
      "One of the many virtues of Eyal Naveh's splendid work is that it places Niebuhr's thought in a broad intellectual context. By examining a wide-ranging group of writers and intellectuals who commented on Niebuhr's work, Naveh succeeds, as no other scholar has, in explaining the nature of the 'discourse' that arose around the central concept of non-utopian liberalism. Naveh sheds light on how Niebuhr came to reject the notion that people were essentially rational and beneficent, a notion he considered overly idealistic and sentimental... By examining the discourse that developed around Niebuhr's central ideas, this book helps explain much about the changing contours of American thought in the twentieth century. Reinhold Niebuhr died in 1971; thirty years later the World Trade Center in New York City was destroyed by terrorists. In the aftermath of September 11, Naveh explains, Niebuhr's insight into situations of crisis can indeed invigorate American politics and culture, and may yet serve as an antidote to the illusions and sense of complacency that have too frequently dominated American life in recent decades." -- From the Foreword by Professor Richard Polenberg, Cornell University.
      "The rise of neoconservatism and postmodern radicalism at the end of the century suppressed the reform-minded liberals. The enthusiasts for the relatively utopian liberation theology eclipsed Niebuhr's influence in theology in many places. The erosion of the mainline liberal churches by the loss of their children from the church weakened the base for Niebuhr's type of neoliberal theology. The rise of evangelical and fundamentalist political movements also decreased the influence of Niebuhrian paradigms. However, Naveh sees ways that the mythological liberalism of Niebuhr shares common ground with much of postmodern epistemology while avoiding its relativism. Naveh's own sense of politically fit discourse, in the end, sees that Niebuhr's nonutopian liberalism transcends the particularities of its origins and has continued vitality for the post-9/11 American republic. Niebuhr is quintessentially American in his liberal pragmatism, which Naveh celebrates. Naveh's book is the only one to focus on Niebuhr's critique of utopianism as a motif for a book-length study. The study is accurate in what it presents, and the concluding chapters on the legacy of Niebuhr present interesting interpretations." -- The Journal of Religion.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Foreword by Richard Polenberg; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Liberalism and Its Discontents in a Time of Crisis; Moral Man and Immoral Society: The Beginning of a Non-Utopian Discourse; Divine Ethics and a Deficient Mankind; The Limits of Knowledge; Pacifism, Intervention, and the Nazi Menace; Total War and Tragic Victory; From Precarious Peace to Stable Cold War; Irony', Non Utopia' and Dialectical Liberalism' in the 1950s; On the Threshold of a New Utopia: Liberal Experiments and Radical Illusions in the 1960s; The Legacy: Non-Utopian Discourse after Niebuhr; Epilogue: The Open-ended Course of Non-Utopian Liberalism; Index.

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