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After Heidegger?

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This unique volume collects more than 30 new essays by prominent scholars on what remains philosophically provocative in Heidegger's thought. His writings continue to invite analysis and application - ut, particularly in the light of his political affiliations, they must also be critiqued. Philosophy today takes place after Heidegger in that his views should not be accepted naively, and there are new issues that he did not address - but also in that we continue to think in the wake of important questions that he raised. The contributors to this volume ask questions such as: - What does it mean to think "after" Heidegger? - What is valuable in his early work on finite existence, and in his early and late phenomenology? - What is the root of his political errors? Are there still elements in his thought that can yield helpful political insights? - Should we emulate his turn toward "releasement"? - Can he help us understand the postmodern condition? Readers will find thought-provoking echoes and points of contention among these engaging and lively essays.
Editors' Introduction / Part I: Overviews / 1.Heidegger: Enduring Questions, Drew Hyland / 2. On Beyond Heidegger, Gregory Fried / 3. In Heidegger's Wake, Daniel Dahlstrom / 4. The Critical Appropriation of Heidegger's Philosophy, Peter Gordon / Part II: After the Black Notebooks / 5. What is Left of Heidegger, Donatella Di Cesare / 6. Thinking-Time: Or, Why Do ""We"" Ask About the Future of Heidegger's Thinking? Peter Trawny / 7. Getting Ourselves on the Hook, Julia Ireland / 8. Aftermath, Babette Babich / Part III: Politics and Ethics / 9. Heidegger: Beyond Anti-Semitism and Seinsgeschichte, John McCumber / 10. Ecce Homo/Ecce Cogitatio: On Heidegger's Politics and Philosophy, Lawrence Hatab / / 11. Thought, Action and History: Rethinking Revolution After Heidegger, Arun Iyer / 12. Ethics After Heidegger, Dennis Schmidt / Part IV: Life and Existence / 13. Becoming Hermeneutical Before Being Philosophical, Robert Schaff / 14. The Strangeness of Life in Heidegger's Philosophy, Eric Nelson / 15. Alienation and Belongingness, Kevin Aho and Charles Guignon / 16. Being at Issue, Richard Polt / 17. Heidegger's Schematizations, Lee Braver / 18.Dasein: From Existential Situation to Appropriation in the Event, Theodore Kisiel / Part V: Phenomenology and Ontology / 19. Of Paths and Method: Heidegger as a Phenomenologist, Steven Crowell / 20. But What Comes Before the ""After""? Thomas Sheehan / 21. Still, the Unrest of the Question of Being, Katherine Withy / 22. What is the Meaning of the Meaning of Being? Simon Critchley / 23. The Future of Thought: Of a Phenomenology of the Inapparent, Frann++ois Raffoul / Part VI: Thinking with Late Heidegger/ 24. On the Essence and Concept of Ereignis: From Techne to Technicity, William McNeill / 25. Learning to See Otherwise: The Transformative Appropriation of Vision, David Kleinberg-Levin / 26. On the Meaning and Possibility of Thought, Miguel de Beistegui / 27. Clearing and Space: Thinking with Heidegger and Beyond, Gn++nter Figal / 28. Thinking Embodied Time-Spaces with and Beyond Heidegger, Daniela Vallega-Neu / 29. The Appeal of Things: Ethics and Relation, Andrew Mitchell / 30. Overcoming the Subjectivisms of Our Age, Richard Capobianco / Part VII: Openings to Others /31. Thinking Heidegger's Postmodern Unthought, Iain Thomson / 32. East-West Dialogue after Heidegger, Bret Davis / 33. This is not a Love Story: Robot Girl and das Rettende after Heidegger, Trish Glazebrook / About the Contributors / Index
Editors' Introduction / Part I: Overviews / 1.Heidegger: Enduring Questions, Drew Hyland / 2. On Beyond Heidegger, Gregory Fried / 3. In Heidegger's Wake, Daniel Dahlstrom / 4. The Critical Appropriation of Heidegger's Philosophy, Peter Gordon / Part II: After the Black Notebooks / 5. What is Left of Heidegger, Donatella Di Cesare / 6. Thinking-Time: Or, Why Do "We" Ask About the Future of Heidegger's Thinking? Peter Trawny / 7. Getting Ourselves on the Hook, Julia Ireland / 8. Aftermath, Babette Babich / Part III: Politics and Ethics / 9. Heidegger: Beyond Anti-Semitism and Seinsgeschichte, John McCumber / 10. Ecce Homo/Ecce Cogitatio: On Heidegger's Politics and Philosophy, Lawrence Hatab / / 11. Thought, Action and History: Rethinking Revolution After Heidegger, Arun Iyer / 12. Ethics After Heidegger, Dennis Schmidt / Part IV: Life and Existence / 13. Becoming Hermeneutical Before Being Philosophical, Robert Schaff / 14. The Strangeness of Life in Heidegger's Philosophy, Eric Nelson / 15. Alienation and Belongingness, Kevin Aho and Charles Guignon / 16. Being at Issue, Richard Polt / 17. Heidegger's Schematizations, Lee Braver / 18.Dasein: From Existential Situation to Appropriation in the Event, Theodore Kisiel / Part V: Phenomenology and Ontology / 19. Of Paths and Method: Heidegger as a Phenomenologist, Steven Crowell / 20. But What Comes Before the "After"? Thomas Sheehan / 21. Still, the Unrest of the Question of Being, Katherine Withy / 22. What is the Meaning of the Meaning of Being? Simon Critchley / 23. The Future of Thought: Of a Phenomenology of the Inapparent, Francois Raffoul / Part VI: Thinking with Late Heidegger/ 24. On the Essence and Concept of Ereignis: From Techne to Technicity, William McNeill / 25. Learning to See Otherwise: The Transformative Appropriation of Vision, David Kleinberg-Levin / 26. On the Meaning and Possibility of Thought, Miguel de Beistegui / 27. Clearing and Space: Thinking with Heidegger and Beyond, Gunter Figal / 28. Thinking Embodied Time-Spaces with and Beyond Heidegger, Daniela Vallega-Neu / 29. The Appeal of Things: Ethics and Relation, Andrew Mitchell / 30. Overcoming the Subjectivisms of Our Age, Richard Capobianco / Part VII: Openings to Others /31. Thinking Heidegger's Postmodern Unthought, Iain Thomson / 32. East-West Dialogue after Heidegger, Bret Davis / 33. This is not a Love Story: Robot Girl and das Rettende after Heidegger, Trish Glazebrook / About the Contributors / Index
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