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Publications

(with E. LiPuma and M. Postone), (1993) Cambridge: Polity Press and Chicago: University of Chicago Press..

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1
Aesthetic foundations of Democratic politics in the work of Hannah Arendt Kimberly F. Curtis

Chapter 2
The odor of judgment: Exemplarity, propriety, and politics in the company of Hannah Arendt Kirstie M. McClure

Chapter 3
Propriety and provocation in Arendt's political aesthetic Susan Bickford

Chapter 4
Communication and transformation: Aesthetics and politics in Kant and Arendt Anthony J. Cascardi

Chapter 5
"Please sit down but don't make yourself at home": Arendtian "visiting" and the prefigurative politics of consciousness-raising Lisa Disch

Chapter 6
Communication, transformation, and consciousness-raising Nancy Fraser

Chapter 7
Hannah Arednt: Modernity, alienation, and critique Dana R. Villa

Chapter 8
Hannah Arendt and the meaning of the public/private distinction Eli Zaretsky

Chapter 9
Plurality, promises and public spaces Craig Calhoun

Chapter 10
Must politics be violent? Arendt's utopian vision John McGowan

Chapter 11
"The banality of evil" reconsidered Richard J. Bernstein

Chapter 12
Working in ?

Chapter 13
Afterword: Reflective judgments by a spectator on a conference that is now history Martin Jay

(with W.R. Scott and M. Meyer), (1990) Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.

(with F. A. J. Ianni), (1976) The Hague: Mouton, and Chicago: Aldine.