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Heidegger's Fascist Affinities

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In treating Heidegger's Black Notebooks as central to his philosophical project, this book shows how his philosophy emerges from the same combination of anti-Semitism and ethno-nationalism that pro...
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  • 05 March 2019
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Reexamining the case of one of the most famous intellectuals to embrace fascism, this book argues that Martin Heidegger's politics and philosophy of language emerge from a deep affinity for the ethno-nationalist and anti-Semitic politics of the Nazi movement. Himself a product of a conservative milieu, Heidegger did not have to significantly compromise his thinking to adapt it to National Socialism but only to intensify certain themes within it. Tracing the continuity of these themes in his lectures on Greek philosophy, his magnum opus, Being and Time, and the notorious Black Notebooks that have only begun to see the light of day, Heidegger's Fascist Affinities argues that if Heidegger was able to align himself so thoroughly with Nazism, it was partly because his philosophy was predicated upon fundamental forms of silencing and exclusion. With the arrival of the Nazi revolution, Heidegger displayed—both in public and in private—a complex, protracted form of silence drawn from his philosophy of language. Avoiding the easy satisfaction of banishing Heidegger from the philosophical realm so indebted to his work, Adam Knowles asks whether what drove Heidegger to Nazism in the first place might continue to haunt the discipline. In the context of today's burgeoning ethno-nationalist regimes, can contemporary philosophy ensure itself of its immunity?

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Price: $120.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Imprint: Stanford University Press
Publication Date: 05 March 2019
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781503608191
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

"Heidegger's insistence on the authority of the silent led him to view National Socialism as a panacea for modernity's technological attempt to render transparent all that is spoken and known. Adam Knowles's exceptional book opens up a new window onto the philosopher's embrace of Nazism and its attack on World Jewry."
— Michael Meng
Adam Knowles is Assistant Teaching Professor of Philosophy at Drexel University.
Contents and Abstracts
Prologue: Hidden in Plain Sight
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1Heidegger's Politics of Silence
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2Völkisch Affinities and the Renewal of the German Spirit
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3The Unsaid in Being and Time
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4Withdrawal in Aristotle's Metaphysics
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5Being the Measure: The Pedagogy of Male Self-Mastery
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6Being without Measure: Silencing the Feminine
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7Land and Volk: The Silent Place of the Black Notebooks
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Epilogue: Philosophy and Totalitarianism
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