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Speaking through the Mask: Hannah Arendt and Politics of Social Identity
Barnes and Noble
Speaking through the Mask: Hannah Arendt and Politics of Social Identity
Current price: $85.95


Barnes and Noble
Speaking through the Mask: Hannah Arendt and Politics of Social Identity
Current price: $85.95
Size: Hardcover
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Hannah Arendt was famously resistant to both psychoanalysis and feminism. Nonetheless, psychoanalytic feminist theory can offer a new interpretive strategy for deconstructing her equally famous opposition between the social and the political.
Supplementing critical readings of Arendt's most significant texts (including
The Human Condition
,
On Revolution
Rahel Varnhagen
The Origins of Totalitarianism
Eichmann in Jerusalem
, and
The Life of the Mind
) with the insights of contemporary psychoanalytic, feminist, and social theorists, Norma Claire Moruzzi reconstitutes the relationship in Arendt's texts between constructed social identity and political agency.
Moruzzi uses Julia Kristeva's writings on abjection to clarify the textual dynamic in Arendt's work that constructs the social as a natural threat; Joan Riviere's and Mary Ann Doane's work on feminine masquerade amplify the theoretical possibilities implicit in Arendt's own discussion of the public, political mask.
In a bold interdisciplinary synthesis, Moruzzi develops the social applications of a concept (the mask) Arendt had described as limited to the strictly political realm: a new conception of (political) agency as (social) masquerade, traced through the marginal but emblematic textual figures who themselves enact the politics of social identity.
Supplementing critical readings of Arendt's most significant texts (including
The Human Condition
,
On Revolution
Rahel Varnhagen
The Origins of Totalitarianism
Eichmann in Jerusalem
, and
The Life of the Mind
) with the insights of contemporary psychoanalytic, feminist, and social theorists, Norma Claire Moruzzi reconstitutes the relationship in Arendt's texts between constructed social identity and political agency.
Moruzzi uses Julia Kristeva's writings on abjection to clarify the textual dynamic in Arendt's work that constructs the social as a natural threat; Joan Riviere's and Mary Ann Doane's work on feminine masquerade amplify the theoretical possibilities implicit in Arendt's own discussion of the public, political mask.
In a bold interdisciplinary synthesis, Moruzzi develops the social applications of a concept (the mask) Arendt had described as limited to the strictly political realm: a new conception of (political) agency as (social) masquerade, traced through the marginal but emblematic textual figures who themselves enact the politics of social identity.