257 résultats
1925510267Duncker & Humboldt 1925. Hardcover with Dust Jacket. VERY GOOD. Personal copy of political theorist Hans Morgenthau with his neat marginal pencilling and newsprint placemarkers. 8vo half black cloth over green marbled boards gilt stamped spine lettering and printer's device to front cover. With publisher's original plain brown dust jacket quite brittle and tattered; original plain slipcase present in a tattered state as well. Provenance: From Hans Morgenthau's daughter Susanna Morgenthau. The penciling matches that of the dozens of other books we have cataloged from his library. The Catholic jurist and political philosopher Carl Schmitt was one of the most influential political thinkers of the 20th Century in no small part for his role in establishing the ideological underpinnings of the Third Reich. He was unavoidably a key interlocutor for all German political scholars of the Weimar Era including Hans Morgenthau who would go on to become one of the most influential political thinkers of the 20th century in his own right from a much different but related vantage point.William Scheuerman writes 'the young Hans Morgenthau was involved in an intense 'hidden dialogue' with Carl Schmitt twentieth-century Germany’s most significant right-wing authoritarian political thinker.' 'Although committed to a sociologically minded analysis of international law shaped by left-wing Weimar legal thought the young Morgenthau turned early on to the work of the right-wing authoritarian thinker Carl Schmitt in order to develop his realistic or sociological approach. Morgenthau's precocious fascination with Schmitt though at first glance surprising is by no means difficult to fathom. Other members of the Sinzheimer School - including Ernst Frankel and Franz Neumann - similarly pursued a close and at times surprisingly sympathetic examination of Schmitt's work during the 1930s. Like Morgenthau they vociferously criticized his extreme right-wing political preferences while acknowledging that Schmitt offered the outlines of a realistic i.e. power-oriented vision of politics too often missing from mainstream jurisprudence and legal positivism. Morgenthau's early writings highlighted deep flaws in Schmitt's thinking not only denouncing his political choices but ultimately describing his theory as fundamentally unsound. Yet he credited Schmitt with acknowledging the need for precisely that realistic account of power relations in the international arena which legal orthodoxy had failed to deliver. Like Morgenthau Schmitt had long been skeptical of mainstream international law which he analogously interpreted as veiling the brutal realities of inequality at the international level. Morgenthau initially appears to have identified Schmitt's theory despite its weaknesses and troublesome political orientation as a potentially useful source of insights for his own alternative theory of international law. Morgenthau's first mention of Schmitt in 1929 . offered a critical response to a widely read 1927 essay by Schmitt in which the right-wing theorist had defined the political as constituting a fundamentally distinct and independent sphere of activity existing alongside alternative modes of human activity. In Schmitt's initial formulation morality concerned the problem of good and bad aesthetics was occupied with the distinction between beautiful and ugly economics was preoccupied with profitability and unprofitability whereas only politics concerned the contrast between what Schmitt famously described as friend and foe. The young Morgenthau astutely diagnosed the Achilles' heel of this position: Schmitt's exposition misleadingly implied that political activity was limited to a pre-given set of objects or concerns thereby obscuring the possibility that any conceivable sphere of activity could take on political qualities. In its stead Morgenthau proposed that politics be described as 'a characteristic quality or coloration which any substance can take on' IRWG 67. The distinctive attribute of political activity was captured best by focusing on the degree of intensity of the conflict at hand. Although drawing their substantive concerns from any of a host of moral aesthetic and economic arenas of human activity identifiably political concerns were those in which a high degree of intensity of conflict had surfaced IRWG 69. Even though he admitted the difficulty of determining at what specific juncture a particular conflict had become intense and thus authentically political Morgenthau insisted that his alternative model of intensity offered a superior way of capturing the distinctive traits of political life. In his view politics was never an either/or state of affairs but always a matter of degree necessarily depending on how intense - and potentially violent - a conflict had become. Schmitt apparently agreed. As Morgenthau noted in his 1978 autobiographical reflections Schmitt subsequently 'changed the second 1932 edition of the Concept of the Political in the light of the new propositions of my thesis without lifting the veil of anonymity from their author.'47 In fact Schmitt's 1932 study dropped the misleading imagery of politics as a distinct or separate sphere instead following Morgenthau's conceptualization of politics as concerning conflicts characterized by intense enmity. Yet Schmitt never bothered to acknowledge his debts to the young left-leaning Jewish Morgenthau. For a politically upwardly mobile right-wing thinker busy cultivating influence with Germany's rising authoritarian political groupings such an admission would have been incon-venient. In his 1978 comments Morgenthau went so far as to accuse Schmitt of having engaged in mean-spirited plagiarism. He recounted a humiliating 1929 meeting with Schmitt in which Morgenthau hoped to discuss their shared interest in the political only to encounter a calculating mean-spirited careerist: 'when I walked down the stairs from Schmitt's apartment I stopped on the landing between his and the next floor and said to myself: 'Now I have met the most evil man alive.' Schmitt's subsequent kowtowing to the Nazis apparently did not take Morgenthau by surprise.' Morgenthau: Key Contemporary Thinkers 32-34. Duncker & Humboldt hardcover
196425651<p>VG HC w/DJ</p> Clarendon Press hardcover
2004187528New York: Museum of Jewish Heritage 2004. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Near Fine in a Near Fine dust jacket. Museum of Jewish Heritage hardcover
2024x-1621908992Univ of Tennessee Pr 2024. Paperback. New. 311 pages. 8.75x5.75x1.00 inches. Univ of Tennessee Pr paperback
2016006262Baltimore MD: Passager Books. 81pp. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. E6 . Fine. Paperback. First Edition. 2016. Passager Books paperback
1022020455.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1019845007.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1023552868.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
50164770like new. unknown
1922178738Garden City New York: Doubleday Page & Company 1922. First edition presentation copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper "To my friend John D. Whiting who helped me to understand & enjoy my visits to Machpelah and Mt Gerizim - both of which were outstanding events in our sojourn in Palestine October 15/29 Henry Morgenthau". Whiting 1882-1951 was the leader of the American Colony in Jerusalem a Christian utopian community. Henry Morgenthau Sr. served as US Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1913 to 1916 during which he became one of the most prominent critics of the Armenian Genocide. He resigned in protest and returned to America to raise public awareness and funds for Armenian relief. His memoir charts his emigration from Germany to New York as a Jewish child his rise in business and politics and his experience as ambassador. Octavo. Original blue cloth spine and front cover lettered in gilt. Portrait of Morgenthau mounted to the front pastedown later notation to front free endpaper. Extremities and inner hinges neatly repaired spine sunned. A good copy. hardcover
1140173553New. Brand new and still unused unknown
1140173588New. Brand new and still unused unknown
1923002122085LONDON UK: HEINEMANN. Bound in blue cloth with clear gilt titles to front board and spine this dated 1923 hardcover First Edition is VG. X11/454pp with 19 Chapters Appendix and Index.Portrait Frontispiece of Morgenthau with slightly torn tissue-guard. Small repair to top of spine: nothing missing otherwise VG . Very Good. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1923. HEINEMANN hardcover
1163722251.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
9354948154.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
192227282Garden City NY: Doubleday Page and Company 1922. fair. 25 cm 454 illus. index some foxing. Henry Morgenthau was a German-American lawyer realtor and diplomat who served as American Ambassador to Turkey from 1913-1916. He discusses how the rumors of the outbreak of the Spanish-American War affected his real estate deals. Doubleday, Page and Company unknown
192214597Garden City NY: Doubleday Page & Company 1922. First Edition. fair. 454 illus. appendix index rear bd quite weak spine faded bds scratched & stained bd corners quite worn sm tears at spine. Binding cracked at p. 374. Henry Morgenthau 1856-1946 was a German-American lawyer realtor and diplomat who served as American Ambassador to Turkey from 1913-1916. He discusses how the rumors of the outbreak of the Spanish-American War affected his real estate deals pp. 54 56. Although he was Jewish himself he opposed the Zionist movement; chapter XIX is on "Zionism a Surrender Not a Solution. " Doubleday, Page & Company unknown
MC00C-00377Doubleday Page. Collectible - Acceptable. Garden City NY: Doubleday Page and Co. 1918. 1st edition. 8vo hardcover. xv407pp. Illustrations maps portraits. Fair book. No dust jacket. Corners slightly bumped. Front hinge cracked. World War 1 Armenian Genocide Turkey Inquire if you need further information. Doubleday, Page hardcover
45225165like new. unknown
1926sgn 1810<p>Signed. Near Fine/good. Later printing first issued in 1918. Inscribed to Most Reverend James H. Ryan Archbishop of Modra. Book has light even toning otherwise excellent. Jacket has paper loss at the head of the spine 4 half inch tears on the front and back cover and shelf wear. Binding is tight no foxing corners are square and the pages are clean and unmarked. Rev. Ryan was later Archbishop of Omaha. Ambassador Morgenthau has dated inscribed and signed on the front free end page. See photos. Shipped boxed.</p> Doubleday, Page & Co. hardcover
1023454815.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
50193881like new. unknown
1144597323.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
53131489-nnew. unknown
1026138582.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback