The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt
Augustine and the Invention of Modernity
Challenges the consensus that depicts Hannah Arendt as a secular thinker.
The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt clarifies how to understand Arendtâs arguments about freedom, collective action, and the problem of evil as political theological, rather than political theoretical or philosophical. To achieve this, Weinman offers a comparative reading of Arendtâs engagement with Augustine, from her 1929 dissertation through to The Life of the Mind, which she was working on when she died in 1975. Weinmanâs innovation is to not only read both works together, but to also read them in light of Arendtâs discussion of Augustine in key passages taken from all her works written in the decades between them. Arendtâs attempt to reconcile liberal commitments with the Augustinian tradition makes clear why Arendtâand not Carl Schmittâought to be read as offering the preeminent response to Max Weberâs theory of modernity as inescapably secular, the result of irreversible processes of disenchantment.
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Augustine and the Invention of Modernity
Challenges the consensus that depicts Hannah Arendt as a secular thinker.
The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt clarifies how to understand Arendtâs arguments about freedom, collective action, and the problem of evil as political theological, rather than political theoretical or philosophical. To achieve this, Weinman offers a comparative reading of Arendtâs engagement with Augustine, from her 1929 dissertation through to The Life of the Mind, which she was working on when she died in 1975. Weinmanâs innovation is to not only read both works together, but to also read them in light of Arendtâs discussion of Augustine in key passages taken from all her works written in the decades between them. Arendtâs attempt to reconcile liberal commitments with the Augustinian tradition makes clear why Arendtâand not Carl Schmittâought to be read as offering the preeminent response to Max Weberâs theory of modernity as inescapably secular, the result of irreversible processes of disenchantment.











