Recent world-wide political developments have persuaded many people that
we are again living in what Hannah Arendt called "dark times." Jackson's
response to this age of uncertainty is to remind us how much experience
falls outside the concepts and categories we habitually deploy in
rendering life manageable and intelligible. Drawing on such critical
thinkers as Hannah Arendt, Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, and Karl
Jaspers, whose work was profoundly influenced by the catastrophes that
overwhelmed the world in the middle of the last century, Jackson
explores the transformative and redemptive power of marginalized voices
in the contemporary conversation of humankind.