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Author Vadén, Tere, author.

Title Heidegger, Žižek and Revolution / Tere Vadén.

Publication Info. Rotterdam, The Netherlands : SensePublishers, 2014.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource (viii, 158 pages).
text file PDF
Physical Medium polychrome
Series Perspectives of Critical Theory and Education
Perspectives of critical theory and education.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Summary Why did Martin Heidegger, the giant of continental philosophy, believe in 1933 that Hitler is the future of Europe? And why does Slavoj Žižek, 'the most dangerous philosopher in the West', support Heidegger's right wing militancy? Heidegger and Žižek are not only erudite thinkers on human being but also incorrigible revolutionaries who even after the catastrophic failures of their favourite revolutions - the October revolution for Žižek and the National Socialist revolution for Heidegger - want to overcome capitalism; undemocratically, if necessary. The two share a spirited and sophisticated rejection of the liberalist worldview and the social order based on it. The problem is not that liberalism is factually wrong, but rather that it is ethically bad. Both argue for building and educating a new collective based on human finitude and communality. In the tradition of the Enlightenment, Žižek advocates a universalist revolution, whereas Heidegger sees the transformation rooted in particular historical existence, inviting a bewildering array of mutually exclusive criticisms and apologies of his view. The crisis that Heidegger and Žižek want to address is still here, but their unquestioned Europocentrism sets a dark cloud over the whole idea of revolution.
Contents Acknowledgements; chapter 1:introduction; a revolution, after all?; radical heidegger as the starting point; notes; chapter 2:metaphysics is politics; truth is not neutral; heidegger and žižek in everyday politics; heideggerian marxism and žižek as the new marcuse?; the problem with the liberal subject; notes; chapter 3:heidegger on revolution; the subject, the worker, the polis; "nur noch die jugend kann uns retten"; heidegger's step and its direction; notes; chapter 4:what is wrong in heidegger's revolution?; a small man living in hard times.
The liberal criticism: too much postmodernismdecisionism; the french critiques: too little postmodernism; nazism as anticommunism; nazism as asubjective national experience; the typical marxist critique; žižek: untypical marxist critique and praise; notes; chapter 5:industrial agriculture and concentration camps or the will and evil; notes; chapter 6:žižek on a see-saw; notes; chapter 7:žižek and heidegger avec means; notes; bibliography.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Heidegger, Martin, 1889-1976 -- Criticism and interpretation.
Heidegger, Martin, 1889-1976.
Criticism and interpretation.
Žižek, Slavoj -- Criticism and interpretation.
Žižek, Slavoj.
Revolutionaries.
Revolutionaries.
Liberalism.
Liberalism.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Electronic books.
Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Other Form: Print version: Vadén, Tere. Heidegger, Žižek and Revolution. Rotterdam : SensePublishers, ©2014
ISBN 9789462096837 (electronic book)
946209683X (electronic book)
9462096813
9789462096813
9462096821
9789462096820
9789462096813
9789462096820
Standard No. 10.1007/978-94-6209-683-7