Oct 17th
6:30–9:30pm EDT
Meets 4 Times
Thankfully we have 9 other Lecture Classes for you to choose from. Check our top choices below or see all classes for more options.
Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ Online Classroom
Shocks and Phantasmagoria: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project Walter Benjamin once wrote that The Arcades Project was “the theater of all my struggles and all my ideas.” Never completed and well over a decade in the making, The Arcades Project takes on the presentation and history of an entire era and place: the Parisian Arcades of the early 19th century. Via quotations, observations, commentaries, philosophical...
Tuesday Oct 17th, 6:30–9:30pm Eastern Time
(4 sessions)
Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ Online Classroom
An ancient epic and foundational text for a great variety of peoples, the Ramayana has had a lasting influence on everything from popular art to classical South Asian thought to contemporary Hindu politics. The Ramayana tells the sweeping story of the exile and return of the ruler Rama from the kingdom of Ayodhya. Rama’s adventures—including the abduction of his wife Sita by the demonic Ravana and the ensuing war to rescue her—become the ground...
Wednesday Oct 18th, 6:30–9:30pm Eastern Time
(4 sessions)
Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ Online Classroom
What kinds of knowledge can be found in the fraught space between insight and taboo, between enlightenment and horror? In Sophocles’s Oedipus Tyrannus, once the truth Oedipus’ paternity has been revealed, the Chorus cries to its king: “I pity you, but I cannot look at you, though there’s much I want to ask and much to learn and much to see.” Continuously in Sophocles’s work, in the Oedipus plays and beyond, heroes and heroines tread...
Wednesday Nov 15th, 6:30–9:30pm Eastern Time
(4 sessions)
Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ Online Classroom
“Welfare” is often equated simply with money. In fact, it’s a body of law, implemented by administrative agencies and aimed at the regulation of working-class families. Sometimes referred to as “the criminal law for women,” the latter family regulation system, like the criminal legal system, has a long history as a state apparatus of racialized social control. As Dorothy Roberts has pointed out, “the family policing system played an...
Wednesday Nov 15th, 6:30–9:30pm Eastern Time
(4 sessions)
Brooklyn Institute for Social Research @ Online Classroom
Rosalind Krauss is among the most formidable and incisive voices in art criticism today. When she left Artforum in 1976—following a dust-up over “vulgar” images and artworld economics sparked by the magazine’s publication of the now infamous “Benglis ad”—she would go on to found October, a progressive, politically engaged journal of contemporary art that, throughout the 1980s, transformed the way art objects and movements were seen...
Wednesday Nov 15th, 6:30–9:30pm Eastern Time
(4 sessions)
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You will need a reliable Internet connection as well as a computer or device with which you can access your virtual class. We recommend you arrive to class 5-10 minutes early to ensure you're able to set up your device and connection.
This class will be held via Zoom unless otherwise specified
Hannah Arendt and Martin Heidegger’s love affair is perhaps the most well-known, if not notorious, in modern Western letters. But, putting the more intimate aspects aside, how can we understand the intellectual connection, sometimes ardent, sometimes ambivalent, sometimes hostile that tied the two together for the majority of their adult lives—even after Heidegger’s turn to Nazism?
In this course we will explore the affinities and differences that constituted Heidegger and Arendt’s shared and enduing intellectual engagement—the philosophical traditions, divergent approaches to thinking, and original work in political philosophy and theory that emergent therefrom. Reading Arendt and Heidegger side-by-side we will explore key questions and themes in their work related to thinking, technology, the meaning of being, and poetics. While many people assume Heidegger’s influence on Arendt’s work, this course will also explore Arendt’s influence on Heidegger’s writing—from Being in Time to his later work on thinking. Drawing from published works, archival materials, correspondence, secondary essays, and editorial notes, we will piece together their philosophical conversations. Often at odds with one another, Arendt and Heidegger had different understandings of the meaning of being—those classical problems of metaphysics that ask after what it means for humans to be in the world. We will look at Heidegger’s being-in-the-world and being-toward-death, and Arendt’s being-in-the-world-with-others and natality, the principle of being-toward-birth. What did Heidegger mean when he said Arendt was the muse for Being in Time? What did Arendt mean when she wrote she was doing the work of dismantling metaphysics? And finally, what can an intellectual history of Heidegger and Arendt teach us: About the meaning (and, as Arendt saw it, limits) of Heidegger’s Existenz philosophy? About Arendt’s phenomenological political philosophy (so difficult to assimilate to the traditional categories of conservative, liberal, or socialist)? Is Arendt’s work a complement to Heidegger’s, or a negation—or is the relation something altogether more ambiguous? Readings will be drawn from major and minor works and essays by Arendt and Heidegger, including The Human Condition, Being and Time, Love and Saint Augustine, “The Question Concerning Technology,” and much more.
This course is available for "remote" learning and will be available to anyone with access to an internet device with a microphone (this includes most models of computers, tablets). Classes will take place with a "Live" instructor at the date/times listed below.
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The Brooklyn Institute for Social Research was established in 2011 in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn. Its mission is to extend liberal arts education and research far beyond the borders of the traditional university, supporting community education needs and opening up new possibilities for scholarship in the...
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