Lexington Books
Pages: 184
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-4143-4 • Hardback • October 2011 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7391-4145-8 • eBook • December 2011 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
S.T. Campagna-Pinto is assistant professor of religious studies at California State University, Bakersfield.
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Sacred Trace
Chapter 2: A New Reach of Freedom
Chapter 3: Heart Religion and the Pragmatist Imagination
Chapter 4: The Art of Expansiveness
Chapter 5: Strenuous Democracy and the Workshop of Being
Notes
Bibliography
About the Author
Streams of scholarship flow together in Campagna-Pinto’s insightful and well-argued book: the reach of American philosophy beyond the classic pragmatists, and the significance of American religious traditions for shaping trunk lines of American thought and culture. For this enterprise, the author has well-chosen examples in Jonathan Edwards and William James, two prime intellectual engines of the American “quest or experiment,” as Campagna-Pinto puts it. Edwards and James shared an enriched empiricism, “stereoscopic” in its attention to the worlds of the heart and mind. And this book is comprehensive: it can appeal to students of religious studies, philosophy, and intellectual history; moreover, its careful reading of disparate topics, including rhetoric, suicide, art, the elusiveness of intimacy, and democracy suggests its ability to contribute to a variety of fields
— Paul Croce, Stetson University, former President of the William James Society
In The Workshop of Being, Campagna-Pinto brings together the two biggest intellectuals in American history—the Calvinist Christian Jonathan Edwards and the post-Christian liberal William James—and gets them singing in harmony. Campagna-Pinto's penetrating readings of both thinkers moves beyond the labels that divide their legacies and into a realm of 'heart religion,' where earnest examination of personal experience and social relations brings Edwards and James together in the pursuit of 'strenuous democracy.'
— Amy Kittelstrom, Sonoma State University
Workshop of Being provides a searching, deeply conceived, and entirely compelling examination of the religious thought of Edwards and James, one that also sheds important new light on the origins and development of the tradition of American pragmatism. Through a series of penetratingly exact readings, Campagna-Pinto elucidates an abiding concern shared by these two thinkers with the affective ground of speculative thought, while at the same time showcasing the manifest complexity and originality of each body of work. In doing so, he shows how the apparently disparate intellectual projects of these two major American thinkers converge in counseling theologians and philosophers alike to think with the "heart" not only the head.
— Alan Hodder, Hapshire College