Desolation and Enlightenment: Political Knowledge After Total War, Totalitarianism, and the Holocaust

Desolation and Enlightenment: Political Knowledge After Total War, Totalitarianism, and the Holocaust

by Ira Katznelson
Desolation and Enlightenment: Political Knowledge After Total War, Totalitarianism, and the Holocaust

Desolation and Enlightenment: Political Knowledge After Total War, Totalitarianism, and the Holocaust

by Ira Katznelson

Hardcover

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Overview

Durgaing and especially after the Second World War, a group of leading scholars who had been perilously close to the war's devastation joined others fortunate enough to have been protected by distance in an effort to redefine and reinvigorate Western liberal ideals for a radically new age. Treating evil as an analytical category, they sought to discover the sources of twentieth-century horror and the potentialities of the modern state in the wake of western desolation. In the process, they devised strikingly new ways to understand politics, sociology and history that reverberate still. In this major intellectual history, Ira Katznelson examines the works of Hannah Arendt, Robert Dahl, Richard Hofstadter, Harold Lasswell, Charles Lindblom, Karl Polanyi, and David Truman, detailing their engagement with the larger project of reclaiming the West's moral bearing.

In light of their epoch's calamities these intellectuals insisted that the tradition of Enlightenment thought required a new realism, a good deal of renovation, and much recommitment. This array of historians, political philosophers, and social scientists understood that a simple reassertion of liberal modernism had been made radically insufficient by the enormities and moral catastrophes of war, totalitarianism, and holocaust. Confronting their period's dashed hopes for reason and knowledge, they asked not just whether the Enlightenment should define modernity, but which Enlightenment we should wish to have. Decades later, in the midst of a new type of war and reanimated discussions of the concept of evil, we share no small stake in assessing their successes and limitations.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231111942
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 05/14/2003
Series: Leonard Hastings Schoff Lectures
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

About The Author
Ira Katznelson is interim provost, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History, and deputy director of Columbia World Projects at Columbia University. He is the author of many acclaimed books, including When Affirmative Action Was White (2005) and Fear Itself: The New Deal and the Origins of Our Time (2013).

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
1. Beyond Common Measure
2. The Origins of Dark Times
3. A Seminar on the State
4. A New Objectivity
Index

What People are Saying About This

E. J. Dionne

Brilliant... an event not only in the history of ideas, but in our own history, too.

E. J. Dionne, Jr., author of Why Americans Hate Politics

E.J. Dionne

Brilliant... an event not only in the history of ideas, but in our own history, too.

Saskia Sassen

The larger intellectual and normative project in this brilliant book is to revise and extend the legacies of Enlightenment thought so as to help us confront war and violence.... Today, when we once again face a period of desolations and a new type of total war, Katznelson's book assumes a whole new importance.

Saskia Sassen, author of Losing Control? Sovereignty in an Age of Globalization

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