
New Books in Critical Theory Lyndsey Stonebridge on Hannah Arendt's Lessons on Love and Disobedience (JP)
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Sep 5, 2025 Lyndsey Stonebridge, a Professor of English Literature at the University of Birmingham, unpacks Hannah Arendt’s insights on love and disobedience, emphasizing their relevance today. She critically assesses the banality of evil, drawing parallels between historical atrocities and current political climates, such as Gaza. Stonebridge also navigates Arendt's complex views on American imperialism and the responsibility of individuals versus systemic coercion. The discussion probes the fragile ethics of democracy and critiques contemporary literature's portrayal of these enduring themes.
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The Diagonal Of Freedom
- Arendt's 'diagonal of freedom' captures how we navigate past and future without certainty.
- Freedom requires acting within contingency, embracing the new rather than following fixed recipes.
Imagination Is The Ground Of Judgment
- Judgment, for Arendt, grows from imagination and visiting perspectives beyond oneself.
- The humanities train this imaginative capacity essential to political judgment.
Natality As Responsiveness To The New
- Natality means both birth and the capacity to respond to novelty through love and action.
- For Arendt, political change must arise from spontaneous, ground-up responsiveness to new situations.











