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Nihilistic Times: Thinking with Max Weber [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius: 178x127 mm
  • Sari: The Tanner Lectures on Human Values
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Nov-2025
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674301609
  • ISBN-13: 9780674301603
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, kõrgus x laius: 178x127 mm
  • Sari: The Tanner Lectures on Human Values
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Nov-2025
  • Kirjastus: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674301609
  • ISBN-13: 9780674301603
Teised raamatud teemal:

A Seminary Co-op Notable Book

“What makes Brown’s book especially well worth reading is her impressive ability to show how key themes in Weber’s scholarship—including his emphasis on the defining characteristics of modernity . . . speak to our own time.” —Inside Higher Ed

“Presses us to think more carefully and imaginatively about the relationships among human freedom, human value, and something beyond purely human concerns, be it truth, God, or Gaia.” —Commonweal

“Worth reading…A timely reminder of the nihilistic air we breathe.” —Law & Liberty

“Elegantly and concisely written…this insightful, thought-provoking book illuminates some objective culture factors contributing to the social division and degradation of public life in many democracies today.” —Critical Theology

How has politics become a playpen for vain demagogues? Why has the university become an ideological war zone? What has happened to Truth? Wendy Brown places nihilism at the center of these predicaments. Emerging from the retreat of God and tradition in the face of science and reason, nihilism removes the foundation on which values, including that of truth, stand. It hyperpoliticizes knowledge and renders the profound trivial, the future unimportant, and corruption banal.

In search of remedies, Brown turns to Max Weber’s Vocation Lectures. Weber famously decries the effects of nihilism on scholarly and political life and proposes to keep the two separate, restricting academic work to the pursuit of facts and the political realm to the legislation of values. Without accepting Weber’s arch oppositions, Brown acknowledges the distinctions they mark as she charts reparative strategies for our own times. She calls for retrieving knowledge from hyperpoliticization without expunging values from research or teaching, and she challenges the left to make good on its commitments to critical thinking and democratization.



Wendy Brown diagnoses a late-modern nihilism that trivializes values—including truth itself—and reduces politics to narcissism and power-mongering. Rereading Max Weber, who saw a similar predicament in his own time, Brown seeks to reground political action in responsibility and reorient classrooms to the critical thinking citizens need today.

Arvustused

Distinguished political theorist Wendy Brown revisits Webers lectures, struck by the resonance between our present moment and the plight of Webers audience. Universities are menaced by political and economic forces, as corrupt but charismatic demagogues reshape the social sphere. Can Webers stringent inspiration be a guide? -- Kieran Setiya * Los Angeles Review of Books * What makes Browns book especially well worth reading is her impressive ability to show how key themes in Webers scholarshipincluding his emphasis on the defining characteristics of modernity, including disenchantment, rationalization, bureaucracy, efficiency, predictability, calculability and control and on subjective meaningspeak to our own time. -- Steven Mintz * Inside Higher Education * For Brown, scholarship and teaching are callings in the Weberian sense to the extent that they demand a range of renunciations (of political propagandizing, moral preaching, and practical payoff), but she departs from Weber in her far more optimistic assessment of scholarships role in developing an informed, politically engaged citizenry. -- Len Gutkin * Chronicle of Higher Education * Presses us to think more carefully and imaginatively about the relationships among human freedom, human value, and something beyond purely human concerns, be it truth, God, or Gaia. -- Maeve Cook * Commonweal * Worth readingA timely reminder of the nihilistic air we breathe. Its easy to lose sight of this situation, especially if were caught up in defending some particular worldview or policy proposal. A well-crafted reminder of fundamental features of the contemporary human condition is always beneficial. -- Mark K. Spencer * Law & Liberty * In recent years, Brown has been best known for her critical analysis of neoliberal rationality and the way it has weakened resources for political actionWhat she finds most valuable in Webers ethos, not least in its implications both for the left and for the academy, is the willingness to face uncomfortable truths without lapsing into wishful thinking or despair. -- William Davies * London Review of Books * An exquisite meditation on Max Webers classic lectures on knowledge and politics as vocations. -- Samuel Moyn * Critical Inquiry * Elegantly and concisely writtenthis insightful, thought-provoking book illuminates some objective culture factors contributing to the social division and degradation of public life in many democracies today. -- Don Schweitzer * Critical Theology * [ Nihilistic Times] is a passionate book about passion. It falls into what is now a long post-Weberian tradition of works seeking a transformative solution to the apparently irresolvable dilemmas and conflicts of the moment in the form of a spiritual revolution. -- Stephen Turner * Society * In Nihilistic Times, the most important political theorist of her generation models how to think with someone else. Through a spirited engagement with Max Weber, Wendy Brown confronts the challenge of creating meaning in a disturbed age. To read this book is to rediscover what the real work of higher education is. -- Kathryn Lofton, author of Consuming Religion Drawing inspiration from Max Weber, as well as Friedrich Nietzsche, Wendy Brown boldly and incisively argues that nihilism underpins our current social, economic, and political crises. Brown is one of the most original political theorists writing today, and her analytically astute engagement with Webers Vocation Lectures is essential reading for everyone who harbors hope for a democratic repair of the world. -- Robert Gooding-Williams, author of In the Shadow of Du Bois In two luminous essays, Wendy Brown rereads Max Webers two iconic Vocation Lectures from a century ago. Retooling Webers attacks on nihilistic politics and nihilistic science, Brown helps us understandand resistcurrent nihilisms, like techno-rationalism and demagoguery. She gives us back what should be our highest political value: the shared act of creating values, in a feelingthinking way. -- Paul North, author of Bizarre-Privileged Items in the Universe In Max Weber, Wendy Brown finds an unexpected ally and a surprising contemporary who gives her the key to a post-nihilist strategy. It is the only chance we have of restoring meaning to politics, namely by shaping the world democratically and regaining control without destroying the world and our very sense of what is real. Both a masterful interpretation of Weber and a most urgent, necessary intervention in political discourse, Brown's book leads us to a new Weber for the left and a way out of what she calls our present-day pre-apocalyptic survivalism.' A most exciting book that will change how we understand our disturbing times. -- Rahel Jaeggi, author of Critique of Forms of Life

Wendy Brown is UPS Foundation Professor in the School of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study and was for many years Class of 1936 First Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Her books, which have been translated into more than twenty languages, include In the Ruins of Neoliberalism, States of Injury, Undoing the Demos, and Walled States, Waning Sovereignty.