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Suffering and Evil in Nature: Comparative Responses from Ecstatic
Naturalism and Healing Cultures, edited by Joseph E. Harroff and
Jea Sophia Oh, provides many unique experiments in thinking through
the implications of ecstatic naturalism. This collection of essays
directly addresses the importance of values sustaining cultures of
healing and offers a variety of perspectives inducing radical hope
requisite for cultivating moral and political imaginings of
democracy-to-come as a regulative ideal. Through its invocation of
"healing cultures," the collection foregrounds the significance of
the active, gerundive, and processual nature of ecstatic naturalism
as a creative horizon for realizing values of intersubjective
flourishing, while also highlighting the significance of culture as
an always unfinished project of making discursive, interpretive and
ethical space open for the subaltern and voiceless. Each
contribution gives voice to the tensions and contradictions felt by
living participants in emergent communities of
interpretation-namely those who risk replacing authoritarian
tendencies and fascist prejudices with a faith in future-oriented
archetypes of healing to make possible truth and reconciliation
between oppressor and oppressed, victimizers and victims of
violence and trauma. These essays then let loose the radical hope
of healing from suffering in a ceaseless community of communication
within a horizon of creative democratic interpretation.
In this succinct yet ample work, Zhao Tingyang, one of China's most
distinguished intellectuals, provides a profoundly original
philosophical interpretation of China's story and also develops a
Chinese worldview for the future. Over the past few decades, the
question Where did China come from? has absorbed the thoughts of
many of China's best historians. Zhao, keenly aware of the
persistent and pernicious asymmetry in the prevailing way scholars
have gone about theorizing China according to Western concepts and
categories, has tasked both Chinese and Western scholars to
"rethink China." Zhao introduces what he terms a distinctively
Chinese centripetal "whirlpool" model of world order to interpret
the historical progression of China's tianxia (All under Heaven)
identity construction. In this book, Zhao forwards a compelling
thesis not only on how we should understand China, but also on how
China until recently has understood itself.
In this succinct yet ample work, Zhao Tingyang, one of China’s
most distinguished intellectuals, provides a profoundly original
philosophical interpretation of China’s story and also develops a
Chinese worldview for the future. Over the past few decades, the
question Where did China come from? has absorbed the thoughts
of many of China's best historians. Zhao, keenly aware of the
persistent and pernicious asymmetry in the prevailing way scholars
have gone about theorizing China according to Western concepts and
categories, has tasked both Chinese and Western scholars to
"rethink China." Zhao introduces what he terms a distinctively
Chinese centripetal "whirlpool" model of world order to interpret
the historical progression of China’s tianxia (All under
Heaven) identity construction. In this book, Zhao forwards a
compelling thesis not only on how we should understand China, but
also on how China until recently has understood itself.
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