Martin Buber: Creaturely Life and Social Form


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Description

A new collection of essays highlighting the wide range of Buber's thought, career, and activism.

Best known for I and Thou, which laid out his distinction between dialogic and monologic relations, Martin Buber (1878-1965) was also an anthologist, translator, and author of some seven hundred books and papers. Martin Buber: Creaturely Life and Social Form, edited by Sarah Scott, is a collection of nine essays that explore his thought and career.

Martin Buber: Creaturely Life and Social Form shakes up the legend of Buber by decentering the importance of the I-Thou dialogue in order to highlight Buber as a thinker preoccupied by the image of relationship as a guide to spiritual, social, and political change. The result is a different Buber than has hitherto been portrayed, one that is characterized primarily by aesthetics and politics rather than by epistemology or theology.

Martin Buber: Creaturely Life and Social Form will serve as a guide to the entirety of Buber's thinking, career, and activism, placing his work in context and showing both the evolution of his thought and the extent to which he remained driven by a persistent set of concerns.



Author: Sarah Scott
Publisher: Indiana University Press (Ips)
Published: 12/01/2022
Pages: 284
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.92lbs
Size: 9.00h x 6.00w x 0.64d
ISBN13: 9780253063649
ISBN10: 0253063647
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Religious
- Religion | Philosophy
- Religion | Judaism | Theology

About the Author

Sarah Scott is Professor of Philosophy at Manhattan College. Her essays on Buber have appeared in edited volumes and in The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy, International Philosophical Quarterly, and Forum Philosophicum.