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Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism: How Can We Imagine a Pluralist Politics?


  • Olin Auditorium 35 Henderson Circle Drive Red Hook, NY, 12571 United States (map)

Hannah Arendt was suspicious of cosmopolitanism, world government, and the loss of the common sense connections that are part of living with and amidst one's tribe. Wary of assimilation and universalism, Arendt understood the need for a tribe, whether that tribe be her “tribe” of good friends or living amongst people with whom one shares cultural and social prejudices. At the same time, Arendt was also deeply suspicious of tribalism in politics. Politics always involves a plurality of peoples. Thus tribal nationalism—what she called the pseudo-mystical consciousness—is anti-political and leads to political programs aimed at ethnic homogeneity. 


Event: Thursday October 17 10am-6pm, Friday October 18 9:30am-5:30pm

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ICORN lecture by Lyndsey Stonebridge: We are Free to Change the World

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1 December

Lyndsey Stonebridge: Free to Change the World, Lessons in Love and Disobedience