Heidegger's Volk: Between National Socialism and Poetry - Between National Socialism and Poetry
James Phillips
Stanford University Press (2005)
In Collection
#2660
0*
Lit Crit
Paperback 0804750718
English
Product Details
LoC Classification B3279.H49P49 2005
Dewey 193
Nationality German
Cover Price $24.95
No. of Pages 296
Height x Width 8.9 x 6.0  inch
User Defined
Conflict WW2
Notes
In 1933 the philosopher Martin Heidegger declared his allegiance to Hitler. Ever since, scholars have asked to what extent his work is implicated in Nazism. To address this question properly involves neither conflating Nazism and the continuing philosophical project that is Heidegger's legacy, nor absolving Heidegger and, in the process, turning a deaf ear to what he himself called the philosophical motivations for his political engagement. It is important to establish the terms on which Heidegger aligned himself with National Socialism. On the basis of an untimely but by no means unprecedented understanding of the mission of the German people, the philosopher first joined but then also criticized the movement. An exposition of Heidegger's conception of Volk hence can and must treat its merits and deficiencies as a response to the enduring impasse in contemporary political philosophy of the dilemma between liberalism and authoritarianism.



Includes a discussion of Heideggers 1952 essay "Language of the Poem ' on 'George 'Trackl'