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Caffè Europa
On-line journal of European culture and informed democracy
Reset
A month of ideas.
Giancarlo Bosetti Editor-in-chief
Reset Dialogues on Civilizations
The web magazine for all the tribes of the world
the web magazine for all the tribes of the world
Visual Arts
IT Tuesday, 29 September 2009

Seyla Benhabib awarded the Ernst Bloch Prize

Seyla Benhabib, the Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy and a member of the Scientific Committee of Resetdoc, was awarded the Ernst Bloch Prize in Ludwigshafen, Germany, on Sept. 25. The prize, one of Germany's most distinguished philosophical honors, is given every three years with a 15,000-Euro honorarium in the name of the German-Jewish social philosopher Ernst Bloch (1885-1977) by Ludwigshafen, the city of his birth. Previous recipients include Leszek Kolakowski, Pierre Bourdieu, Jurgen Moltmann and Eric Hobsbawm, among others. The Bloch Prize selection committee praised Benhabib's work "for taking its inspiration from the contradictions of a globalized world. She analyzes the relationship between citizens' rights and human rights and opens our eyes to the need for an ethics of discourse. She proposes a culture of civil and civic creativity, reminding one of the Blochian utopia of the multiversum." (From the Yale Bulletin)


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