Terrell Carver
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Augustine
Confessing like a man
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This chapter turns to two contemporary political theorists, writing on Augustine, and putting their own answers to these questions - Jean Bethke Elshtain and William Connolly. It is a meditation, not on Augustine's political theory, but on what political theorists have made of Augustine, on what they want their theorists to be like, and on what does and does not give someone an authorial presence in our imaginations. The chapter views the surviving surfeit of autobiographical material about Augustine as a disadvantage to political theorists who generally need to conceptualise an 'author' for their readings of his texts. It is more about the way that biography is handled within the political tradition, than the political theory of Augustine himself, as we read it today. Reading Augustine for what he writes about himself as a man could make the vagaries of masculinity visible and problematic today in interesting ways.

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