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Heidegger and Criticism
Retrieving the Cultural Politics of Destruction
William Spanos
$30.00 paper
ISBN: 0-8166-2097-0
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-1857-6$90.00 cloth
ISBN: 0-8166-2096-2
ISBN-13: 978-0-8166-2096-8
Spanos examines the controversy, both in Europe and the United States, surrounding Heidegger and recent disclosures about his Nazi past. Not intended as a defense or apology for Heidegger's thought, Spanos instead affirms the importance of Heidegger's "antihumanist" interrogation of the modern age, its globalization of technology, and its neo-imperialist politics.
"As an engaging examination of the current 'state of play' of what is possibly the most protracted of contemporary philosophical controversies. Spanos' book represents an important contribution. Highly recommended." —Canadian Philosophical Reviews
“Challenging and demanding. Spanos wants to stake out a broader role for literary theory via Heidegger, thereby making it a kind of social criticism. Spanos’s text is, by turns, a retrospective gaze at his own thinking on Heidegger and his encounter with Foucault, a polemical defense of Heidegger’s continued validity and relevance in literary studies, a scathing critique of what he calls ‘humanism’ and its various attempts to delegitimate Heideggerian discourse by implicating it in Heidegger’s politics, and a call for a ‘post-humanist’ thinking. Professor Spanos argues that it is not in American appropriations of deconstruction’s ‘textuality’ but in Heidegger’s ‘destruction’ and a careful analysis of Heidegger’s texts (not his politics) that literary theory can become (Spanos says ‘retrieve’) a kind of oppositional cultural criticism as well.” —Philosophy and Social Criticism
William V. Spanos is professor of English and comparative literature at Binghamton University. He is the founding editor of boundary 2 and his many books include The End of Education (1993) and America's Shadow (1999)
362 pages | 1993