The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities
Wedding an analysis of relevant anthropological literature and philosophical theory, this important book re-positions violence—long trivialized by philosophers as an incidental or anomalous feature of humanity—as a central concern for ethical thought. Wendy Hamblet focuses on a fundamental paradox that emerges when well-meaning communities and individuals attempt to implement their ideals in our social, or socialized, world. Very often the unintended consequences of these individual or communal ideals run headlong into the brute fact of bloody human engagement. Through her investigation of violence-legitimization in myth and ancient tales, philosophical accounts (from Plato to Nietzsche), the concept of home as 'refuge,' and recent social scientific data, Hamblet takes up the charge that violence is steeped in our being—it pervades human history and is embedded in the ethos of our modern institutions—and gives us essential tools for better understanding how violence actually operates.
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The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities
Wedding an analysis of relevant anthropological literature and philosophical theory, this important book re-positions violence—long trivialized by philosophers as an incidental or anomalous feature of humanity—as a central concern for ethical thought. Wendy Hamblet focuses on a fundamental paradox that emerges when well-meaning communities and individuals attempt to implement their ideals in our social, or socialized, world. Very often the unintended consequences of these individual or communal ideals run headlong into the brute fact of bloody human engagement. Through her investigation of violence-legitimization in myth and ancient tales, philosophical accounts (from Plato to Nietzsche), the concept of home as 'refuge,' and recent social scientific data, Hamblet takes up the charge that violence is steeped in our being—it pervades human history and is embedded in the ethos of our modern institutions—and gives us essential tools for better understanding how violence actually operates.
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The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities

The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities

by Wendy C. Hamblet
The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities

The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human Communities

by Wendy C. Hamblet

eBook

$44.50 

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Overview

Wedding an analysis of relevant anthropological literature and philosophical theory, this important book re-positions violence—long trivialized by philosophers as an incidental or anomalous feature of humanity—as a central concern for ethical thought. Wendy Hamblet focuses on a fundamental paradox that emerges when well-meaning communities and individuals attempt to implement their ideals in our social, or socialized, world. Very often the unintended consequences of these individual or communal ideals run headlong into the brute fact of bloody human engagement. Through her investigation of violence-legitimization in myth and ancient tales, philosophical accounts (from Plato to Nietzsche), the concept of home as 'refuge,' and recent social scientific data, Hamblet takes up the charge that violence is steeped in our being—it pervades human history and is embedded in the ethos of our modern institutions—and gives us essential tools for better understanding how violence actually operates.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739160558
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 12/10/2003
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 136
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Wendy C. Hamblet is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Adelphi University. Her research focuses upon the problems frustrating peaceful engagement within and among human communities, especially for communities that have suffered histories of radical victimization.

Table of Contents


Chapter 1 Preface: apologia
Chapter 2 Ritual and Mythical Beginnings
Chapter 3 Ritual In-form-ations: the anthropologists' theories
Chapter 4 Resonances in Ritual Theory
Chapter 5 Mythical Traces of the Legacy of Violence: under the shadow of the fall
Chapter 6 Home-Craft in the History of Philosophy: innocent egoist and alone
Chapter 7 The Ambiguities of Home: a phenomenology of identity-construction
Chapter 8 Violence as Community: the suffocating embrace of the home
Chapter 9 Superstructures of Identity
Chapter 10 In the Wake of Violent Rituals
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