Institutional Renewal and Conflict after 1989

Author(s):  
Alena Heitlinger
2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (5) ◽  
pp. 1455-1484 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Wren Montgomery ◽  
M. Tina Dacin

Author(s):  
Barbara Henry

Francesco De Sanctis was a literary critic and historian of Italian literature. He is best remembered for his major work, Storia della letteratura italiana (History of Italian Literature), and as a Hegel scholar, reformer and professor at the University of Naples, politician and militant patriot. Commentators are unanimous that De Sanctis’s biographical and intellectual life comprised two inseparable strands, the literary and the political. For this reason all his writings, even the more narrowly literary critical ones, must be read from the point of view of his commitment to promoting the moral and institutional renewal of Italian society. His Storia della letteratura italiana is the ‘civil history’ of Italy. De Sanctis, actively militant on both the Right and Left, defined his position as ‘moderate left-wing, in politics as in art’.


1985 ◽  
Vol 1985 (49) ◽  
pp. 13-22
Author(s):  
Alan E. Guskin ◽  
Michael A. Bassis

1970 ◽  
Vol 59 (11) ◽  
pp. 586-613
Author(s):  
Richard H. Slavin

Author(s):  
Khaled Furani

This chapter proposes ways in which theology could promote a critique of idolatries in modern anthropology. It culls resources by scouring Nietzsche’s arguments against modernity. Nietzsche enables a vision of modern anthropology as symptomatic of God’s death in the West, thus inducing questions about the ways its adoration of idols may inhibit a truer inquiry. The chapter finds examples to this effect in anthropology’s engagement with the nation state, humanism, and the constitutive concept of culture. It then speculates as to how a theological repudiation of anthropology’s idols could support a conceptual and institutional renewal going far beyond enhancing its study of religion. For instance, anthropology awakened by theistic rationality could adequately engage with the concept of tradition. It could also forge a new grammar of connectivity within the discipline as well as within the disciplinary arrangements of the modern university.


1992 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 52-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo W. Anglin ◽  
Paul W. Mooradian ◽  
Donald L. Hoyt

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