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  1.  6
    Introduction.Alexander Cook & Ned Curthoys - 2013 - Intellectual History Review 23 (3):285-288.
  2.  13
    On Active Solitude.Ned Curthoys - 2017 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 38 (2):325-347.
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  3.  18
    Redescribing the Enlightenment: The German-Jewish adoption of Bildung as a counter-normative ideal.Ned Curthoys - 2013 - Intellectual History Review 23 (3):365-386.
    This essay offers a reconsideration of the ethical vocabulary, social possibilities and religious worldview enabled by the German concept of Bildung, or human self-cultivation, a concept which was enthusiastically adopted by German Jews in the late eighteenth century. By examining the creative use of the concept by German Jewish philosophers such as Moses Mendelssohn (1729?1786) and, later, in a very different political context, Ernst Cassirer (1874?1945), the article challenges a body of scholarship that interprets the German Jewish enthusiasm for Bildung (...)
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  4.  31
    The Emigre Sensibility of'World-Literature': Historicizing Hannah Arendt and Karl Jaspers' Cosmopolitan Intent.Ned Curthoys - 2005 - Theory and Event 8 (3).
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  5.  1
    The legacy of liberal Judaism: Ernst Cassirer and Hannah Arendt's hidden conversation.Ned Curthoys - 2013 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    'This man of our destiny': Moses Mendelssohn, Nathan the Wise, and the emergence of a liberal Jewish ethos -- Diasporic visions: the emergence of liberal Judaism -- Abraham Geiger -- Hermann Cohen's prophetic Judaism -- Ernst Cassirer and the ethical legacy of Hermann Cohen -- Ernst Cassirer: the enlightenment as counter-history -- Hannah Arendt: the task of the historian -- Hannah Arendt: a question of character.
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  6.  20
    The Trial that Never Ends: Hannah Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem in Retrospect. Edited by Richard J. Golsan and Sarah M. Misemer. [REVIEW]Ned Curthoys - 2018 - Arendt Studies 2:255-261.
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