Public officials, journalists and ordinary citizens frequently use words like "tragedy" and "tragic" when trying to make sense of burdensome events and painful setbacks. Political theorists and philosophers have long used the example of Greek tragedy and notions of the tragic to reflect on the nature and significance of democracy in modern life. Pirro offers a way to understand the deep connections between these two seemingly disparate and unconnected discourses of tragedy. Those connections are to be found, he argues, in the interdependent relationship between tragedy and democracy, which first manifested itself in the democratic polis of ancient Athens. The book considers how tragedy has been used to promote democratic activism, foster civic solidarity in times of democratic transition, and form a sense of national identity. Written in an accessible manner and drawing upon political speeches, journalistic reports, works of popular film and literature, and academic writings, The Tragedy of Politics reveals the tragic understandings that form the core of some important contemporary visions of democracy. [this book] is a scholarly scrutiny of tragedy in democracy... [and] would do well in any political science of philosophy collection, enthusiastically recommended.--Sanford Lakoff Tragedies are works of art that issue a call to reflection upon our natures and the ways our blindness to ourselves can bring catastrophe into the world. But these works are also driven by the hope that such reflections can help "tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of the world." Robert Pirro has shown how compelling this call and this hope remain in our times. Tracing a variety of evocations of tragedies - by politicians, playwrights, and theorists, from Robert Kennedy up to the events of 9/11 - Pirro's reminds us that the insights of tragedy remain alive for the aims of a democratic citizenry today. Dennis J. Schmidt, Liberal Arts Professor of Philosophy, Comparative Literature, and German, The Pennsylvania State University His earlier study of Hannah Arendt having established him as a consummate political thinker of tragedy, Robert Pirro expands his net with this path-breaking work to include an extensive body of intellectual and cultural phenomena complicit with a tragic understanding of reality. Pirro breaks with the commonplace misconception that America lacks its tragic moment by astutely tracing the tragic perspectives of such prominent Americans as Robert Kennedy and Cornell West, adds the powerful moral voices of Nelson Mandela and Vaclav Havel, and effectively brings in a variety of German authors and filmmakers from Italian neorealism to the German director Michael Schorr. Adding a critically important strand to political theorizing today, Robert Pirro thus brilliantly succeeds in contemporizing the ancient Athenians' commitment to both tragedy and democracy. - Josef Chytry, University of California, Berkeley &, California College of the Arts. Robert C. Pirro is Professor of Political Science at Georgia Southern University, USA. His research focuses on the political significance of works and theories of tragedy and ordinary language uses of "tragedy" and related terms. His publications include peer-reviewed articles in Political Theory as well as Hannah Arendt and the Politics of Tragedy (2001). Used Book in Good Condition