Review by Choice Review
Few theologians are read as widely by undergraduates and graduates as Kierkegaard. Also author of On Habit (CH, Dec'14, 52-1891), among other works, Carlisle (King's College London, UK) offers an engaging, passionate biography that will help others understand Kierkegaard's corpus. This exploration of Kierkegaard's life shows why he represented positions he did not believe or could not embody yet believed in the importance of believers' relationship with Christ. Carlisle manages to represent Kierkegaard's genius and at the same time recognize how his temperament made it difficult for him to win friends and form alliances with individuals he needed to engage and persuade in order to have a real effect on the practice of Christianity in Denmark. The author is open about Kierkegaard's complex character, mental illness, and courtship of his fiancée (Regine Olsen), recognizing the philosopher's genius but not hiding the ways his family wealth led to a break with the king, the bishop, and finally Olsen (whom he never married). With regard to the last, the author points to how the collapse of Kierkegaard's engagement shaped his subsequent work. Interesting and informative reading, even for those who disagree with the book's exegesis and conclusions. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. --Aaron Wesley Klink, Duke University
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Carlisle (On Habit), reader in philosophy and theology at King's College London, makes an intimidatingly chilly and mercurial figure relatable to readers in this admirable biography. By weaving Søren Kierkegaard's life story around the Socratic question he obsessively asked--what does it mean to be human?--he becomes sympathetic in Carlisle's hands. If Kierkegaard started with the idea that love is what makes one human, he also famously wrote about anxiety and doubt's place in the human experience. Moving fluidly backward and forward through Kierkegaard's life, Carlisle shows how this concern connected to his life's key event: his engagement to a young woman named Regine Olsen. He later broke the engagement, for reasons that remain unclear, and spent the rest of his life philosophizing about life's "dual extremities" of "suffering and joy." As he grew older, he became more focused on Christ as the figure central to understanding this condition--and inflamed Copenhagen's leaders by arguing that institutional Christianity was a failure. Carlisle quotes amply from Kierkegaard's writing, to put the reader into his mind, and from his contemporaries, to convey how deeply his work moved many of them. Nevertheless, Carlisle's Kierkegaard remains surprisingly elusive throughout her scrupulous study, which is perhaps the only reasonable way to depict this complex man. (May)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The 19th-century thinker who inspired existentialists grounded his philosophy in individual experience.Carlisle, a London-based professor of philosophy and theology, offers an empathetic, well-grounded biography of the Danish philosopher, prolific author, and "spiritual seeker" Sren Kierkegaard (1813-1855). His overarching question, posed by Socrates and later taken up by 20th-century existentialists, was: "How can I be a human being in the world?" Human nature, Kierkegaard argued, "is not a fixed, timeless essence, nor a biological necessity, but a creative task for each individual life." His conviction about personal evolution made him suspicious of marriage, the "duties, customs, expectations" required of a husband that might constrain him and impede his ability to express his spiritual life. In addition, he feared being completely open with another person. Once engaged to be married, he ended the relationship rather than reveal to his betrothed the "melancholy, the eternal night brooding," and the "desires and excesses" that caused him great anxiety. The renouncement haunted him for the rest of his life, as did his relationship with his father, a "forbidding, complex" man whose religious ideas became antithetical to those of his son. The Lutheran Church failed to offer Kierkegaard a sacred refuge. "Does he find any more truth there," he asked himself, "than in the theatre, or the lecture hall, or the marketplaceor have churches become the least truthful places in Christendom?" For Kierkegaard, the story of Abraham's journey up and down Mount Moriah became emblematic of "the religious movementsthe deep longing for God, the anxious struggle to understand his vocation, the search for an authentic spiritual paththat shaped his own inner life." Rather than create a conventional chronological narrative, Carlisle moves back and forth in time to underscore how "past and future are vibrant inside us" as she judiciously mines Kierkegaard's works and considerable scholarship to elucidate the philosopher's life, mind, and struggles.A perceptive portrait of an enigmatic thinker. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.