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Full Description
Heidegger, History and the Holocaust is an important contribution to the longstanding debate concerning Martin Heidegger's association with National Socialism. Although a difficult topic, this ambitious new work moves the entire debate on the Heidegger controversy forward.
Following Being and Time Heidegger expands on his notion of authenticity and related notions such as historicity and discusses the possibility of an authentic Dasein of a people along structurally consistent lines to his account of authenticity in Being and Time. O'Brien argues that the same difficulties which appear to hamstring the early account of authenticity further affect the notion of an authentic Dasein of a people; Heidegger's political myopia in the thirties can thus be attributed to an underlying failure to come to terms with some of the difficulties discussed in this study. O'Brien concedes that Heidegger's philosophy is influenced by its historical period and context but argues that, however inflammatory, Heidegger's rhetoric cannot be simply reduced to crude Nazi jingoism.
This book is a genuinely philosophical approach to the Heidegger controversy and a much-needed re-examination of his ideas and influences.
Contents
Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter One - Re-assessing the 'Affair'
The 'Affair' and the rhetorical rules since World War II
Heidegger's refusal to recant
Heidegger's Remarks on the Holocaust
Chapter Two - The Essence of Technology and the Holocaust
Heidegger's 'Agriculture Remark' as Epigraph
The Holocaust and the 'Revealing' Rhetoric of the Final Solution
The Wannsee Conference Protocol
Auschwitz: Factory of Death
But Where Have We Strayed to?
Chapter Three - Heidegger's Heritage: Philosophy, Anti-Modernism and Cultural Pessimism
Adorno and the 'Jargon' of German Authenticity
Bourdieu and Heidegger's Ontological Politics
Zimmerman and the 'Influence' of Spengler
Oswald Spengler - Man and Technics
Ernst Junger
Total Mobilization
Bodenständigkeit, Gelassenheit and the Memorial Address
Chapter Four - The Authentic Dasein of a People
Heidegger and the Authentic Dasein of a People
Freedom Toward Death
Chapter Five - Heidegger and Anti-Semitism
Nature, History, State
The Origin of the Work of Art
The Self Assertion of the German University
The Nazi Rector
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index