Jonathan Badger has turned to Sophocles not only because his plays are beautiful and deep, but also because Sophocles is a wise teacher who can still illuminate for us, his potential students, the deepest aspects of our complex human nature and the enduring predicaments of political life. Badger's book, then, is more than an interpretation of a great tragic poet; it is a far-reaching and penetrating study in political philosophy. Badger brings Sophocles to life by showing that he still speaks to our questions, concerns, and dilemmas, and by placing him in dialogue with some of the seminal thinkers of medieval and early modern political philosophy.
- Devin Stauffer, The University of Texas at Austin
Sophocles and the Politics of Tragedy reveals two primordial sources of human action equally necessary but permanently at odds. Jonathan Badger beautifully articulates the tension within the human soul between longing for the material and for the transcendent, first as the tragic contest between the good and the beautiful and then, by way of thinkers like Aquinas, Jaspers, and, most importantly, Locke, as the defining feature of political life. This is a book that both in its scholarship and in its contemporary pertinence cuts very deep.
-Michael Davis, Sarah Lawrence College
Badger provides beautiful and original analyses of Sophocles' plays in terms of the tragic tension between the human need for both transcendence and security. Sophocles' insights give Badger a window to the history of Western thought that allows him to defend Lockean liberalism as a tragic politics, against medieval, early modern, and contemporary attempts to overcome tragedy. His argument is compelling, sure to be controversial, and will deepen our conversation about ourselves and our politics, while establishing Badger as a major voice in that conversation.
-Mary P. Nichols, Baylor University
Jonathan Badger has turned to Sophocles not only because his plays are beautiful and deep, but also because Sophocles is a wise teacher who can still illuminate for us, his potential students, the deepest aspects of our complex human nature and the enduring predicaments of political life. Badger's book, then, is more than an interpretation of a great tragic poet; it is a far-reaching and penetrating study in political philosophy. Badger brings Sophocles to life by showing that he still speaks to our questions, concerns, and dilemmas, and by placing him in dialogue with some of the seminal thinkers of medieval and early modern political philosophy.
- Devin Stauffer, The University of Texas at Austin
Sophocles and the Politics of Tragedy reveals two primordial sources of human action equally necessary but permanently at odds. Jonathan Badger beautifully articulates the tension within the human soul between longing for the material and for the transcendent, first as the tragic contest between the good and the beautiful and then, by way of thinkers like Aquinas, Jaspers, and, most importantly, Locke, as the defining feature of political life. This is a book that both in its scholarship and in its contemporary pertinence cuts very deep.
-Michael Davis, Sarah Lawrence College
Badger provides beautiful and original analyses of Sophocles' plays in terms of the tragic tension between the human need for both transcendence and security. Sophocles' insights give Badger a window to the history of Western thought that allows him to defend Lockean liberalism as a tragic politics, against medieval, early modern, and contemporary attempts to overcome tragedy. His argument is compelling, sure to be controversial, and will deepen our conversation about ourselves and our politics, while establishing Badger as a major voice in that conversation.
-Mary P. Nichols, Baylor University