Massimo Cacciari, The Witholding Power: An Essay on Political Theology – forthcoming from Bloomsbury in December 2015.

The first English translation of his work, The Witholding Power, offers a fascinating introduction to the thought of Italian philosopher Massimo Cacciari, a prominent and provocative figure in Italian philosophy and political thought. Cacciari is a notoriously complex thinker but this title offers a starting point for entering into the very heart of his thinking. The Witholding Power provides a comprehensive and synthetic insight into his interpretation of Christian political theology and leftist Italian political theory more generally.
The theme of katechon – originally a biblical concept which has been developed into a political concept – has been absolutely central to the work of Italian philosophers such as Agamben and Eposito for nearly twenty years. In The Witholding Power, Cacciari sets forth his startlingly original perspective on the influence the theological-political questions have traditionally exerted upon ideas of power, sovereignty and the relationship between political and religious authority.
With a lengthy introduction by Howard Caygill contextualising the work within the history of Italian thought, this title will offer those coming to Cacciari for the first time a searing insight into his political, theological and philosophical milieu.
Thanks to Philippe Theophanidisfor the link, who also points out this is not the first English translation, and points to // // <meta http-equiv=”refresh” content=”0; URL=/?_fb_noscript=1″ />The Unpolitical. On the Radical Critique of Political Reason and The Necessary Angel. There is also a collection on Architecture and Nihilism. Incidentally, when did ‘withholding’ lose its double-h?
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