Drawing on the collective expertise of an impressive group of international scholars, this book delivers a comprehensive reckoning of the rich, multivalent legacy of the noted scholar and critic Robert B. Pippin. As presented by the contributors to this edited volume, Pippin’s distinctive approach to modern philosophy, politics, art, and culture is seen to establish the definitive scholarly agenda for the next century of philosophical research.
Daniel Conway, Ph.D. (1985), University of California, San Diego, is Professor of Philosophy and Humanities and Thomas F. Mayo Professor of Liberal Arts at Texas A&M University. He has lectured and published widely on topics in post-Kantian European philosophy, political philosophy, aesthetics (especially film and literature), philosophy of religion, critical theory, and genocide studies.
Jon Stewart is a Researcher at the Institute of Philosophy of the Slovak Academy of Sciences. He has worked for many years in the field of nineteenth-century Continental philosophy.
This book is of immediate interest to academic institutes, libraries, and research archives, and it will appeal to a broad readership comprising advanced undergraduate students, graduate students, post-graduate scholars (e.g. research scholars and practitioners), and educated readers. It is suitable for specialized course adoption, either as a required or a recommended text, in the following university departments and programs: philosophy, politics, history, Germanics, literary theory, modern thought, religion, anthropology, cultural studies, and psychology. This book will appeal to an Anglophone audience of readers in the US, UK, Australasia, and Europe.