Description
About the Author
Anna Strelis Soederquist is a researcher at the Soren Kierkegaard Research Center, University of Copenhagen.
Reviews
Freedom, anxiety, and possibility were key terms in existentialism's account of being human. But where the existentialists saw such categories as entwined with the necessarily godless and self-assertive character of human life, this new study by Anna Strelis Soederquist offers a more complex, subtle, and ultimately persuasive view. As she tells the tale, these categories are used by Kierkegaard as integral elements in the process by which we come to ourselves through a humble and courageous readiness that involves openness to the other that is essentially dialogical. A Kierkegaardian education therefore leads not (as many have thought) to isolation and despair, but to a realistic and vulnerable, yet hopeful, self-knowledge and self-commitment. -- George Pattison, University of Glasgow
Though not concentrated in any particular text, Kierkegaard's writings are rife with reflections on the philosophy of education. In a book as rigorously argued as it is creative, Anna Strelis Soederquist deftly presents Kierkegaard as educator, but much more than that, she generates beguiling possibilities for applying Kierkegaard's pedagogical prescriptions. Kierkegaard was hard to please, but I am sure that this is one interpretation of his work that he would have smiled upon. -- Gordon Marino, St. Olaf College
Book Information
ISBN 9781498533775
Author Anna Strelis Soderquist
Format Hardback
Page Count 180
Imprint Lexington Books
Publisher Lexington Books
Weight(grams) 449g
Dimensions(mm) 233mm * 161mm * 19mm