• Faculty

  • Jay Bernstein

    Distinguished Professor of Philosophy

    Email
    bernstej@newschool.edu

    Office Location
    D - 6 East 16th Street

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    Jay Bernstein

    Profile

    **On leave Fall 2024-Spring 2025**

    Jay Bernstein is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the New School for Social Research.

    Philosophy, for me, means interrogating the foundations of our life together, how we make sense of the world, and how we fail.  Philosophy profiles the human as upright and as failing, as knowing and as blinded, as world-making and as suffering, as flourishing and as dying; and how those competing images are bound together in our morals, politics, art, and ordinary life.

    Concentrations: Social and political philosophy; contemporary Continental thought; critical theory; aesthetics; modernism; German idealism and romanticism; Anglo-American philosophy; pragmatism.


    Degrees Held

    PhD 1975, University of Edinburgh


    Recent Publications

    Selected Books

    Political Concepts: A Critical Lexicon (Fordham 2018)

    Torture and Dignity: An Essay on Moral Injury (University of Chicago, 2015)

    Against Voluptuous Bodies: Adorno’s Late Modernism and the Meaning of Painting (Stanford, 2007)

    Classical and Romantic German Aesthetics, editor (Cambridge, 2002)

    Adorno: Disenchantment and Ethics (Cambridge, 2002)

    Recovering Ethical Life: Jürgen Habermas and the Future of Critical Theory (Routledge, 1995)

    The Fate of Art: Aesthetic Alienation from Kant to Derrida and Adorno (Polity, 1992)


    Selected Articles and Book Chapters

    "Remembering Isaac: on the Impossibility and Immporality of Faith," in Paul Kottman (ed.), The Insistence of Art: Aesthetic Philosophy after Early Modernity (Fordham, 2017)

    "'Our amphibian problem': nature in history in Adorno's Hegelian Critique of Hegel," in Rachel Zuckert and James Kreines (ed.), Hegel on Philosophy in History (Cambridge, 2016)

    “Amery’s Devastation and Resentment: An Ethnographic Transcendental Deduction,” Tijdschrift voor Filosofie (2014)

    "Blind Intuitions: Modernism's Critique of Idealism," British Journal of the History of Philosophy (web: January 2015; print: December 2014)

    “'The Demand for Ugliness’: Picasso’s Bodies,” in J.M. Bernstein, et. Al., Art and Aesthetics After Adorno (Fordham, 2013)

    "Forgetting Isaac: Faith and the Impossibility of a Postsecular Society,” in Craig Calhoun, Eduardo Mendietta, Jonathan VanAntwerpen (eds.) Habermas and Religion (Polity, 2013)

    “’the celestial Antigone, the most resplendent figure ever to have appeared on earth’: Hegel’s Feminism,” in Fanny Soderbäck (ed.), Feminist Readings of Antigone (SUNY, 2010)

    “Confession and Forgiveness: Hegel’s Poetics of Action,” in R. Eldridge (ed.), Beyond Representation (Cambridge, 1996)

    Select Talks and Appearances

    "Of Ecocide and Human Rights: On the Ethical Tragedy of Climate Change," The New School for Social Research, June 2020

    "J.M. Bernstein: Social Subjectivity," Thinking Aloud, March 2016


    Research Interests

    Ethical modernism and political atrocity, modernism in art and philosophy, idealism and embodiment.


    Current Courses

    Ind Senior Project
    LPHI 4990, Fall 2024

    Independent Study
    GPHI 6990, Fall 2024

    Future Courses

    Ind Senior Project
    LPHI 4990, Spring 2025

    Independent Study
    GPHI 6990, Spring 2025, Summer 2025

    Independent Study
    LPHI 3950, Spring 2025

    Past Courses

    Human Rights & Climate Change
    LPHI 3062, Spring 2024

    Ind Senior Project
    LPHI 4990, Spring 2024

    Independent Study
    LPHI 3950, Spring 2024

    Independent Study
    GPHI 6990, Spring 2024, Summer 2024

    Master/Slave Dialectic & After
    GPHI 6157, Spring 2024

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