Between Auschwitz and Tradition

Between Auschwitz and Tradition
Author: James R. Watson
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 235
Release: 2021-11-01
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 900446364X

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The reference of the postmodern task of thinking is Auschwitz, the abyss and discontinuity separating us from the world of our ancestors. As inhabitants of Planet Auschwitz our point of reference lacks all transcendental warrants; it is not a non-referable reference which constitutes the abyss we must enter, endure, and in which our intellectual and cultural tradition must be transformed. The private/public transformations which constitute the texts of this book attempt to depart from the dystopic individuality and public life resulting from business-as-usual after Auschwitz. The three parts of the book are progressive reworkings of traditional metaphysics as adapted and modified by a modernism that refuses to grapple with its complicity. It is precisely that complicity which postmodern thinking takes up in its attempt to signify otherwise than the easy modernist translations and images of tradition. Thus it is a series of uneasy images imaging otherwise but never apart from modernity that take us away from complicity toward a transformed tradition. The uneasy images of this book are photogrammic combinations of photographs and texts, mutual supplements, pulling tradition through the Event against the persistent and murderous forces of contemporary idolatry and repression.


Between Auschwitz and Tradition
Language: en
Pages: 235
Authors: James R. Watson
Categories: Philosophy
Type: BOOK - Published: 2021-11-01 - Publisher: BRILL

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The reference of the postmodern task of thinking is Auschwitz, the abyss and discontinuity separating us from the world of our ancestors. As inhabitants of Plan
(God) After Auschwitz
Language: en
Pages: 204
Authors: Zachary Braiterman
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 1998-11-23 - Publisher: Princeton University Press

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The impact of technology-enhanced mass death in the twentieth century, argues Zachary Braiterman, has profoundly affected the future shape of religious thought.
Between Auschwitz and Tradition
Language: en
Pages: 244
Authors: James R. Watson
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 1994 - Publisher: Rodopi

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Argues that the Holocaust has caused a mutation of the world. Our new world is Planet Auschwitz, an unworld with satellites separate and incommunicable. In this
Utopia of Understanding
Language: en
Pages: 270
Authors: Donatella Ester Di Cesare
Categories: Philosophy
Type: BOOK - Published: 2012-06-28 - Publisher: State University of New York Press

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Speaking and understanding can both be thought of as forms of translation, and in this way every speaker is an exile in languageā€”even in one's mother tongue.
After Auschwitz
Language: en
Pages: 312
Authors: Richard L. Rubenstein
Categories: Holocaust (Christian theology)
Type: BOOK - Published: 1966 - Publisher: Indianapolis : Bobbs-Merrill

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Expounds a wide spectrum of problems of post-Holocaust theology: Christianity and Nazism; psychoanalytic interpretation of the connection between religion and t