Keywords

The Politics of Rootedness: On Simone Weil and George Orwell

Oriol Quintana read

Simone Weil and George Orwell both reflected—at a time when liberalism and Christianity were being challenged—on how to provide rootedness to societies and how to provide a moral anchoring and collective inspiration. The chapter considers the extent to which religion plays an important role in these authors’ politics of rootedness. A comparison between them suggests that rather than worrying first about whether or not we need a religious revival, we should worry about whether individuals have the opportunity to enter into contact with beauty. For both Weil and Orwell, a society is well-rooted when there is a continuity between natural beauty and social life. As such, a politics of rootedness entails, in their view, a genuine search for the recognition of all members of a collectivity and, above all, the search for a way of learning again how to find nourishment in the beauty of the world.

in Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle, eds., Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology?, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 103-123.

“‘To Make Known this Method’: Simone Weil and the Business of Institutional Education”

Christopher A. P. Nelson

in Rozelle-Stone, A. Rebecca & Stone, Lucian, eds., The Relevance of the Radical: Simone Weil 100 Years Later, New York: Continuum, pp. 76-90

“The Dance of Perception: The Rôle of the Imagination in Simone Weil’s Early Epistemology”

Warren Heiti

in Keith Moser & Ananta Ch. Sukla, eds., Imagination and Art: Explorations in Contemporary Theory, Brill, pp. 304-331

“Introduction: Weil, Politics & Ideology”

Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle

in Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle, eds., Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology?, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1-24

“Simone Weil’s Heterodox Marxism: Revolutionary Pessimism and the Politics of Resistance”

Scott B. Ritner

in Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle, eds., Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology?, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 185-206

“Thoughts on Weilian Republicanism”

Julie Daigle

in Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle, eds., Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology?, New York: Palgrave Macmillan (2020), pp. in Sophie Bourgault & Julie Daigle, eds., Simone Weil, Beyond Ideology?,New York: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 227-

Simone Weil: Against Being True to Yourself

D.K. Levy read

in Charlotte Alston, Amber Carpenter & Rachael Wiseman, eds., Portraits of Integrity: 26 Case Studies from History, Literature, and Philosophy, Bloomsbury Academic, 2020, pp. 141-149.

D.K. Levy is a moral philosopher working in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh.