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Frederick M. Dolan [11]Frederick Michael Dolan [4]Frederick Dolan [3]
  1. Arendt on philosophy and politics.Frederick Dolan - 2000 - In Dana Villa (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Hannah Arendt. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 261--276.
    Hannah Arendt disavowed the title of “philosopher,” and is known above all as a political theorist. But the relationship between philosophy and politics animates her entire oeuvre. We find her addressing the topic in The Human Condition (1958), in Between Past and Future (a collection of essays written in the early 1960s), and in Men in Dark Times (another collection of essays, this one from the late sixties). It is treated in her Lectures on Kant’s Political Philosophy, composed during the (...)
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  2. The paradoxical liberty of bio-power: Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault on modern politics.Frederick M. Dolan - 2005 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (3):369-380.
    For Hannah Arendt, spontaneous, ‘initiatory’ human action and interaction are suppressed by the normalizing pressures of society once ‘life’ - that is, sheer life - becomes the primary concern of politics, as it does, she finds, in the modern age. Arendt’s concept of the social is indebted to Martin Heidegger’s analysis of everyday Dasein in Being and Time , and contemporary political philosophers inspired by Heidegger, such as Jean-Luc Nancy, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, and Giorgio Agamben, tend to reproduce her account of (...)
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  3. The Right to Be: Wallace Stevens and Martin Heidegger on Thinking and Poetizing.Frederick M. Dolan - 2021 - In Florian Grosser & Nassima Sahraoui (eds.), Heidegger in the Literary World: Variations on Poetic Thinking (New Heidegger Research). pp. 127-140.
    If Martin Heidegger was a philosopher who poetized, Wallace Stevens was a poet who philosophized. In "The Sail of Ulysses," one of his later poems, Stevens speaks enigmatically of a "right to be." The phrase is straightforward, if taken to indicate the right to life. But Stevens is rarely, if ever, straightforward. The poem is much more understandable if we take "being" in a Heideggerian sense, as an understanding of what it means to be.
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  4. Political Action and the Unconscious.Frederick M. Dolan - 1995 - Political Theory 23 (2):330-352.
  5. Report to the Treasurer of Injustice.Frederick M. Dolan - 2021 - In Thanos Zartaloudis & Peter Goodrich (eds.), The Cabinet of Imaginary Laws. Routledge. pp. 62-66.
    The 21st century, otherwise unremarkable after the Great Climate Change Scare of its early decades was revealed to be a hoax, is remembered for its solution to an age-old problem.
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  6.  16
    Political Action and the Unconscious: Decentering the Subject in Arendt and Lacan.Frederick M. Dolan - 1995 - Political Theory 23 (2):330-352.
  7. Paradoxical responsiveness.Frederick M. Dolan - 1998 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 24 (1):83-91.
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  8.  16
    Between Terror and Freedom: Philosophy, Politics, and Fiction Speak of Modernity.Joseph Chytry, Marianne Constable, Joshua Foa Dienstag, Frederick Michael Dolan, Anne-Lise Francois, Jeffrey Isaac, Peter Euben, Michael MacDonald, Ramona Naddaff, Hannah Pitkin, Andrew Seligsohn & Simon Stow (eds.) - 2006 - Lexington Books.
    In this volume, Simona Goi and Frederick M. Dolan gather stimulating arguments for the indispensability of fiction_including poetry, drama, and film_as irreplaceable sites for wrestling with nature, meaning, shortcomings, and the future of modern politics.
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  9. Alan D. Schrift, ed., Why Nietzsche Still? Reflections on Drama, Culture, and Politics Reviewed by.Frederick M. Dolan - 2002 - Philosophy in Review 22 (2):145-147.
     
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  10.  16
    Books in Review.Frederick M. Dolan - 1996 - Political Theory 24 (1):138-142.
  11.  17
    Regions of Sorrow: Anxiety and Messianism in Hannah Arendt and W. H. Auden.Frederick Dolan - 2004 - Philosophy Today 32 (6):881-884.
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  12.  11
    Representing the Political System: American Political Science in the Age of the World Picture.Frederick M. Dolan - 1990 - Diacritics 20 (1):93-108.
  13.  37
    The Banality of Love and the Meaning of the Political.Frederick Michael Dolan - 1997 - Theory and Event 1 (2).
  14.  53
    Book Review: Manhood and American Political Culture in the Cold War. [REVIEW]Frederick M. Dolan - 2006 - Political Theory 34 (6):821-824.
  15. Yannis Stavrakakis, Lacan and the Political Reviewed by. [REVIEW]Frederick Dolan - 2000 - Philosophy in Review 20 (4):293-294.
     
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  16.  31
    Regions of Sorrow: Anxiety and Messianism in Hannah Arendt and W. H. Auden. [REVIEW]Frederick M. Dolan - 2004 - Political Theory 32 (6):881-884.