The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt

Augustine and the Invention of Modernity

Michael Weinman author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:30th Apr '25

Should be back in stock very soon

The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt cover

The Political Theology of Hannah Arendt clarifies how to understand Arendt’s 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 Arendt’s engagement with Augustine, from her 1929 dissertation through to The Life of the Mind, which she was working on when she died in 1975. Weinman’s innovation is to not only read both works together, but to also read them in light of Arendt’s discussion of Augustine in key passages taken from all her works written in the decades between them. Arendt’s attempt to reconcile liberal commitments with the Augustinian tradition makes clear why Arendt—and not Carl Schmitt—ought to be read as offering the preeminent response to Max Weber’s theory of modernity as inescapably secular, the result of irreversible processes of disenchantment.

The book offers a careful consideration of the Augustinian roots of Arendt’s political theology of amor mundi as a trans-rational condition for citizenship in a post-liberal age. A must-read for students of Arendt and her place in political theory in the wake of “Weimar,” between Max Weber and Carl Schmitt. -- Michael Zank, Boston University
In this extraordinary book, Michael Weinman brilliantly charts Arendt's rightful place within the political theology debate, breathing new life into it. Seizing on Augustine's core insight into amor mundi and the cosmic and divine underwriting of human freedom, Weinman's reading of Arendt affirms the capacity to begin anew and love of the world as the basis for a renewed if "heterodox liberalism." -- Linda Zerilli, University of Chicago

ISBN: 9781399525541

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

184 pages