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El. knyga: Homo Temporalis: German Jewish Thinkers on Time

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"A group of modern Jewish intellectuals grappled with concepts of time and temporality. Martin Buber, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan stand at the center of our contemporary understanding of religion, critical theory, politics, and literature. All four rejected notions of borders, territory, or national origin. Their path teaches us about three 'temporal turns'-in 1900, in 1945, and in 2000."--

Homo Temporalis focuses on the importance of temporal concepts for four German Jewish thinkers who profoundly shaped twentieth-century intellectual history: Martin Buber, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan. By analyzing the concept of time, Nitzan Lebovic explores Buber's stress on the temporality of the dialogue between I and Thou; Benjamin's now-time and "dialectics in standstill"; Arendt's understanding of democracy as "natality" or a "permanent revolution"; and the "breathturn" that informs Celan's poetry. Framing the reception of German Jewish thinking in the second half of the twentieth century as a parallel story to the rise of the modern humanities, Homo Temporalis also highlights how these foundational temporal concepts illuminate the causes of the present crisis in the humanities and its disciplinary limitations in the age of biopolitics and the Anthropocene.

1. A Temporal Turn
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Nitzan Lebovic is Professor of History and Apter Chair of Holocaust Studies and Ethical Values at Lehigh University. He is the author of The Philosophy of Life and Death and Zionism and Melancholy and the coeditor of two volumes, including The Politics of Nihilism.