Lyndsey Stonebridge

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Lyndsey Stonebridge



Average rating: 3.95 · 596 ratings · 99 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
On Violence

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3.75 avg rating — 5,220 ratings — published 1970 — 65 editions
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We Are Free to Change the W...

4.13 avg rating — 397 ratings14 editions
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Placeless People: Writings,...

4.17 avg rating — 18 ratings2 editions
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We Are Free to Change the W...

3.83 avg rating — 12 ratings
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Writing and Righting: Liter...

4.25 avg rating — 8 ratings5 editions
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The Judicial Imagination: W...

it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2011 — 7 editions
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The Writing of Anxiety: Ima...

2.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2007 — 8 editions
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Wir sind frei, die Welt zu ...

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3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings
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The Destructive Element: Br...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings8 editions
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[The Destructive Element: B...

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More books by Lyndsey Stonebridge…
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“Acts of civil disobedience were neither the sheer lawlessness of criminals nor the rejection of law itself by anarchists and terrorists. Instead, in civil disobedience, Hannah Arendt saw how the moral act of individual conscience—I cannot live with myself if I consent to this—could sometimes also become a political act. Civil disobedience happens when people are not heard and when a significant number of people see that their government is clearly heading in a lawless direction. The civil disobedient, Arendt said, acts in the name and for the sake of a group; he defies the law and the established authorities on the ground of basic dissent. The civil disobedient is not lawless, she is acting together with others precisely in the spirit of the laws—breathing together, Arendt says.”
Lyndsey Stonebridge, We Are Free to Change the World: Hannah Arendt's Lessons in Love and Disobedience

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