EP 82: Homo Temporalis. Martin Buber, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan on Time
Vortrag von Prof. Dr. Nitzan Lebovic
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Modern scholarship identifies a series of “temporal turns” in
Jewish studies stemming from the early 1900s, 1945, and the present
notion that “time is running out.” Homo Temporalis: German-Jewish
Thinkers on Time follows thinkers who watched catastrophes unfold
but imagined a new world rising from their ashes. Martin Buber,
Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan shaped our
understanding of the Humanities by dedicating their thought to
temporal concepts such as Living-presence (Erlebnis), Now-time,
Natality, and Breath-turn. Their message was a necessary one for
those interested in the modern study of religion, critical
thinking, political thought, and post-1945 literature. They all
shared a deep understanding of time as the most important component
of modern life and “ontological egalitarianism.”
Jewish studies stemming from the early 1900s, 1945, and the present
notion that “time is running out.” Homo Temporalis: German-Jewish
Thinkers on Time follows thinkers who watched catastrophes unfold
but imagined a new world rising from their ashes. Martin Buber,
Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan shaped our
understanding of the Humanities by dedicating their thought to
temporal concepts such as Living-presence (Erlebnis), Now-time,
Natality, and Breath-turn. Their message was a necessary one for
those interested in the modern study of religion, critical
thinking, political thought, and post-1945 literature. They all
shared a deep understanding of time as the most important component
of modern life and “ontological egalitarianism.”
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