Name Index

Adorno, Theodor W.

Agamben, Giorgio

Akhenaten

Andreas-Salomé, Lou

Arendt, Hannah

and American Revolution

on antithesis of power and violence

background

and Benjamin

Between Past and Future

and Black Power movement

call for formation of Jewish army to fight Hitler

conception of politics

and council system

criticism of means-end rationality

criticism of modern age

criticism of Sartre

distinction between liberty and public freedom

Eichmann in Jerusalem

exaggerated thinking of

fabrication and violence

and Fanon

and Greek polis

and homo faber

The Human Condition

and justification of violence

The Life of the Mind

“Lying in Politics”

and “miracle” of beginnings

On Revolution

On Violence

The Origins of Totalitarianism

on racism

and the “real world”

“Reflections on the Hungarian Revolution”

relevance of

and revolutionary spirit

and Schmitt

on terror and violence

and vita activa

Aristotle

Assmann, Aleida

Assmann, Jan

“ambivalence thesis”

anti-Semitic charge against Mosaic distinction thesis

and cultural memory

forms of violence

and mnemohistory

and Mosaic distinction

Moses the Egyptian

Of God and Gods

The Price of Monotheism

Religion and Cultural Memory

on religious violence

Bargu, Banu

Benjamin, Walter

and Arendt

background

Butler’s interpretation of

The Concept of Art Criticism in German Romanticism

contrast between violence and nonviolence

Critchley’s interpretation

critique of social democracy

“Critique of Violence”

Derrida’s deconstruction of essay

distinction between law-making and law-preserving violence

distinction between mythic and divine violence

distinction between political general strike and revolutionary proletarian strike

and divine violence

fascination with essay and reasons

on law and violence

and manifestation

Marcuse’s reading of

and means-end rationality

messianism of

mythic violence

The Origin of German Tragic Drama

Rose’s interpretation of

and Schmitt

Trauerspiel

Birmingham, Peg

Blumenberg, Hans

Buber, Martin

Butler, Judith

Carothers, Dr

Chomsky, Noam

Clausewitz, Claus von

Cortés, Donoso

Cover, Robert

“Violence and the Word”

Critchley, Simon

Cudworth, Ralph

Däuber, Theodor

de Gaulle, Charles

De Maistre, Joseph

Derrida, Jacques

“Force of Law”

Eichmann, Adolf

Fanon, Frantz

ambiguous legacy of

and Arendt

background

Black Skin, White Masks

critique of the national bourgeoisie

critique of violence

A Dying Colonialism

and education of the people

on liberation

and limits of violence

on national culture

on relationship between rural masses and national parties

on socio-psychological effects of colonial violence

strengths and weaknesses of spontaneous violence

and violence of colonial system

The Wretched of the Earth

France, Pierre Mendès

Freud, Sigmund

The Future of an Illusion

Moses and Monotheism

Friedlander, Saul

Gandhi, Mahatma

Gaus, Günter

Habermas, Jürgen

Hayden, Tom

Hayek, Friedrich

Hegel, G.W.F.

Hitler, Adolf

Hobbes, Thomas

Leviathan

Hobsbawm, Eric

Honneth, Axel

Hume, David

Jaspers, Karl

Jay, Martin

Jefferson, Thomas

Jhering, Rudolf von

The End in Law

Jonas, Hans

Kalyvas, Andreas

Kant, Immanuel

Kennedy, Ellen

Kirschheimer, Otto

Kojève, Alexandre

La Capra, Dominick

Lefort, Claude

Lenin, Vladimir

Lowell, Robert

Löwith, Karl

Luxemburg, Rosa

Marcuse, Herbert

Marsham, Sir John

Marx, Karl

Meier, Heinrich

Merleau-Ponty, Maurice

Michnik, Adam

Mills, C. Wright

Morgan, Benjamin

Morgenthau, Hans

Neumann, Franz

O’Brien, Conor Cruise

Philcox, Richard

Rawls, John

Reinhold, Karl Leonhard

Rose, Gillian

Rosenzweig, Franz

Rüthers, Bernd

Carl Schmitt in Dritten Reich

Saddam Hussein

Sartre, Jean-Paul

Scheuerman, William

Schiller, Friedrich

Schmitt, Carl

and absolute enmity

ambiguous legacy of

amoral moralism of

anti-Semitism and support of the Nazis

aporia of

approach to politics

and Arendt

on autonomy of the political and independence from the moral

background

and Benjamin

The Concept of the Political

critique of liberalism

decisionism of

distinction between limited and unlimited enmity

distinction between telluric partisan and the global revolutionary partisan

enmity typology

Ex Capitivate Salus

and friend/enemy distinction

“The Führer Protects the Law”

and Hobbes

on humanity

normative-moral stance

on pacifism

political existentialism of

Political Theology

on politics as destiny

on sin and the political

The Theory of the Partisan

and violence

Scholem, Gershom

Schumpeter, Joseph

Silvers, Robert

Slomp, Gabriella

Sontag, Susan

Sorel, Georges

Reflections on Violence

Spencer, John

Strabo

Strauss, Leo

Taubes, Jacob

Tindal, Matthew

Toland, John

Virgil

Voltaire

Warburton, William

Weber, Max

Wood, Gordon S.

Wyneken, Gustav

Yerushalmi, Yosef

Žižek, Slavoj