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