
Martin Heidegger und die "konservative Revolution"
Reinhard Mehring
Bok · Tysk · 2018 · History.
Tekstet på: Engelsk
Annen tittel | |
---|---|
Omfang | 232 sider
|
Utgave | Originalausgabe
|
Opplysninger | "Rightwing intellectualism of the interwar period (1918-1938) is usually approached from the perspective of the so-called "conservative revolutionary movement." Martin Heidegger's notion of "another beginning" that would spark from a "retrograde step" toward "the first beginning" of philosophy arguably makes him a main proponent of the movement. Nevertheless, his involvement with the movement is often ignored. Mehring's book wants to fill this gap and discusses Heidegger in light of the movement as a conservative revolutionary, a Nietzschean and even a utopian advocate of the "Übermensch." Mehring compares Heidegger with Ernst Jünger and Carl Schmitt and he discusses Manfred Riedel's and Friedrich Kittler's prolific adoptions of some of Heidegger's tenets. Thomas Mann, who was a main proponent of a classically liberal version of the conservatism, is introduced as a positive alternative to Heidegger." -- Side [4]. - "The legal intellectualism of the inter-war period (1918-1938) is often discussed under the heading of the 'conservative revolution'. Martin Heidegger was with his tradition criticism and his figurehead from the 'other beginning' in the 'step back' a main representative of this movement. The present book regards him primarily as a revolutionary, Nietzscheaner and utopian of Ubermenschen. It compares him to Ernst Junger and Carl Schmitt, discusses productive appropriations by Manfred Riedel and Friedrich Kittler, and portrays Thomas Mann as a positive alternative and liberal variant against Heidegger." -- Oversatt fra bakside av omslaget
|
Emner | |
Sjanger | |
Geografisk emneord | |
Dewey | |
ISBN | 9783495489796
|