This analysis of "The Odyssey" and the way it has been interpreted by political philosophers throughout the centuries, has implications for the current state of political thought. The book offers readers insights into "The Odyssey" and aims to provide an understanding of the classic works of Plato, Rousseau, Vico, Horkheimer and Adorno. Through his analysis, Patrick J. Deneen requires readers to rethink the issues that are truly at the heart of our contemporary "culture wars", and he encourages us to reassess our assumptions about the Western canon's virtues or viciousness. Deneen's exploration of Odysseus; and our own enduring battles between the dual temptations of homecoming and exploration, patriotism and cosmopolitanism, and relativism and universality provides a different perspective on contentious debates at the centre of modern theory and philosophy.
This analysis of "The Odyssey" and the way it has been interpreted by political philosophers throughout the centuries, has implications for the current state of political thought. The book offers readers insights into "The Odyssey" and aims to provide an understanding of the classic works of Plato, Rousseau, Vico, Horkheimer and Adorno. Through his analysis, Patrick J. Deneen requires readers to rethink the issues that are truly at the heart of our contemporary "culture wars", and he encourages us to reassess our assumptions about the Western canon's virtues or viciousness. Deneen's exploration of Odysseus; and our own enduring battles between the dual temptations of homecoming and exploration, patriotism and cosmopolitanism, and relativism and universality provides a different perspective on contentious debates at the centre of modern theory and philosophy.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Between Oikos and Cosmos Chapter 2 Odysseus's Choice Chapter 3 Resolving the Ancient Quarrel Between Poetry and Philosophy: Plato's Odyssey Chapter 4 The Harrowing of Rousseau's Emile Chapter 5 Escaping the Dialectic: Vico, The Frankfurt School and the Dialectic of Enlightenment Chapter 6 Against Cosmoploitanism: Resisting the Siren's Song
Patrick J. Deneen is assistant professor of political science at Princeton University.
Deneen brings political philosophy to bear on academic controversy
in a manner that elevates the discussion. A must for all interested
in higher learning and its blessings as well as its pitfalls.
Highly recommended for graduate students, scholars, and
teachers.
*CHOICE*
This is a book of quiet brilliance. In Deneen's well-woven tale,
the afterlife of Odysseus in the classics of political theory
becomes an avenue into the heart of contemporary debate about our
deepest roots and our highest aspirations. When all is said and
done, one of the most compelling voices in this debate turns out to
be Deneen's. Like the Homeric original, his is an odyssey that
moves inward, toward self-knowledge.
*Jacob Howland, University of Tulsa*
After Deneen's account it will be hard ever to return to viewing
The Odyssey as apolitical. For the classical world, Deneen reveals
why Plato's Socrates replaced the warrior Achilles with the founder
Odysseus—an epochal transformation. For today's world, Deneen's
Odyssey speaks tellingly to major tensions between self and
community, particularity and universality, place and peregrination,
the mastery of and integration with nature. All this in a book at
once serious and engrossing.
*Norma Thompson*
Patrick Deneen wonderfully uses the figure of Odysseus—as he
appears in Plato, Rousseau, Adorno, and Horkheimer, as well as in
Homer—to trace a middle course between the stridencies of (some)
postmodern multiculturalists and (some) defenders of the supposed
absolute verities of the canon. It is an enlightening and an
enlightened odyssey through and in political theory and a journey
well worth taking with him.
*Tracy B. Strong, Professor of Political Thought and Philosophy,
University of Southampton*
The Odyssey of Political Theory is based on a powerful idea, which,
once articulated, seems so obvious that one wonders that the book
was only just written. The tradition of the West begins with Homer,
in whose Odysseus the human problem at the heart of poltical theory
is embodied. For Patrick Deneen understanding Odysseus means
understanding a cluster of dualisms: politics vs. philosophy,
particular vs. universal, poetry vs. philosophy, myth vs.
enlightenment, convention vs. nature. For this reason,
understanding Odysseus has preoccupied thinkers as various as
Plato, Rousseau, Vico, Adorno, and Horkheimer. By way of Odysseus,
The Odyssey of Political Theory inquires at once into the essence
of poltical theory and into the history of how that essence has
been understood; it is an intelligent, elegantly written, and yet
altogether unpretentious book.
*Michael Davis, Sarah Lawrence College*
This elegant study subtly unpacks for us the astonishing richness
of Homer's Odyssey, reminding us that the great books are great
precisely because they never cease to cast new light on the
mysteries of human existence. Deneen shows us why the tale of
Odysseus the polytropos has had such inexhaustible fascination for
a steady stream of interpreters, from Plato to Adorno—and why it
has fresh urgency for us today.
*Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma*
[Deneen's] imaginative work offers something for historians,
classicists, and political theorists alike, and provides a
compelling demonstration of the enduring 'relevance' of an ancient
myth which he claims the more ignorant amongst post-modern
theorists have tried to remove from American universities
altogether.
*Political Studies Review*
Deneen's book is exeptional both in its command of the scholarly
literature and in its philosophical sensitivity. Anyone who doubts
the greatness of Homer's Odyssey should read Deneen's book and
report back. Unlike much political theory, it never hectors,
badges, or insists. It is just elegantly persuasive and completely
compelling.
*Polis*
The great benefit of Deneen's book is the way in which it inspires
a reader to return to the original texts.
*The Review of Politics*
This is a brilliant essay, traversing a vast intellectual space
with admirable ease and fairness.
*Modern Age*
It is a well-crafted and rewarding study. . . . Deneen's book is an
elegant study strongly recommended for anyone interested in the
historical reception of Odysseus.
*Political Theory*
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