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Reading Arendt in the Waiting Room
Reading Arendt in the Waiting Room: A Philosophy Primer for an Anxious Age | Jonathan Foiles
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Anxiety may be the defining feeling of our current era, and though it affects many people on a deeply personal level, the last few years have also witnessed the rise of more communal feelings of dread and unknowing, problems that sometimes seem too big to face. Will the United States remain a democracy? Can we still have meaningful lives amid the rubble of late capitalism and the inevitable creep of climate change? How do we even start to grapple with a problem so large it seems to pervade almost every corner of our lives? In Reading Arendt in the Waiting Room, Jonathan Foiles, a licensed psychotherapist and lecturer at the University of Chicago's Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice, explains how philosophy can help us respond to these deep questions and communal worries about modern life. Read how Søren Kierkegaard can speak to feelings of helplessness in the face of police violence, how Hannah Arendt can help us rethink the seemingly unavoidable problem of a warming planet, and how social advocates like Jane Addams and Dorothy Day can offer hope and resolve in a world that sometimes seems like it's already ended.Thoughtful, discerning, personal, and accessible, Reading Arendt in the Waiting Room will serve as a concise companion for anyone looking to address our cultural unease and find new ways to face it together.
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Did your religious anxiety turn into climate anxiety, and either way, you‘re currently wrestling with apocalyptic anxiety with a side of the end of democracy?! Well, apparently it‘s not just me! A philosophy primer by way of memoir, this short book is by a kindred spirit, social worker, and psychotherapist who‘s found help in Kierkegaard, Heidegger, Arendt, Aristotle, and others. I only wish this book were a little longer and more novice-friendly!