Includes bibliographical references (pages 137-144) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Preface to the English translation -- Introduction: a thesis in need of revision -- The being-historical landscape -- Types of being-historical anti-semitism -- The being-historical concept of "race" -- The foreign and the foreign -- Heidegger and Husserl -- Work and life -- Annihilation and self-annihilation -- After the shoah -- Attempts at a response -- Afterword to the German second edition -- Afterword to the German third edition.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
In 2014, the first three volumes of Heidegger's Black Notebooks - the personal and philosophical notebooks that he kept during the war years - were published in Germany. These notebooks provide the first textual evidence of anti-Semitism in Heidegger's philosophy, not simply in passing remarks, but as incorporated into his philosophical and political thinking. In Heidegger and the Myth of a Jewish World Conspiracy, Peter Trawny, the editor of those notebooks, offers the first evaluation of Heidegger's philosophical project in light of them. While Heidegger's affiliation with National Socialism is well known, the anti-Semitic dimension of that engagement could not be fully told until now. Trawny traces Heidegger's development of a grand "narrative" of the history of being, the "being-historical thinking" at the center of Heidegger's work after Being and Time. Two of the protagonists of this narrative are well-known to Heidegger's readers: the Greeks and the Germans. The world-historical antagonist of this narrative, however, has remained hitherto undisclosed: the Jews, or more specifically "world Judaism." As Trawny shows, world Judaism emerges for Heidegger as a racialized, destructive, technological threat to the German homeland, indeed to any homeland. Trawny pinpoints recurrent anti-Semitic themes in the Notebooks, including Heidegger's adoption of crude cultural stereotypes, his assigning of racial reasons to philsophical decisions (even undermining his Jewish teacher, Edmund Husserl), his especially damning endorsement of a Jewish "world conspiracy" (such as that proposed by the Protocols of the Elders of Zion), and his first published remarks on the extermination camps and gas chambers under the troubling aegis of a Jewish "self-annihilation." Trawny concludes with a thoughtful meditation on how Heidegger's achievements might still be valued despite these horrifying facets of his thought. Unflinching and systematic, this is a crucial assessment of one of the most important philosophers in history. -- from dust jacket.
TRANSLATED AS
Title
Heidegger und der Mythos der jüdischen Weltverschwörung.
UNIFORM TITLE
General Material Designation
Heidegger und der Mythos der jüdischen Weltverschwörung.
Language (when part of a heading)
English
PARALLEL TITLE PROPER
Parallel Title
Heidegger and the myth of a Jewish world conspiracy