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Ohana, David Nietzsche and Ernst Jünger: From nihilism to totalitarianism 1989 p.754 Article On Jünger Nietzsche, Jünger, Nihilism, Totalitarianism, Heidegger, Political Theory, Technology, Revolution
Citation with Excerpt Ohana, David 1989 Article Hist. Eur. Ideas Nietzsche Jünger Nihilism Totalitarianism Heidegger Political Theory Technology Revolution On Jünger

"Nietzsche and Ernst Jünger: From nihilism to totalitarianism"

by Ohana, David (1989)

Abstract

The aesthetic-nihilistic revolution in western culture initiated by Nietzsche in the nineteenth century was transformed by Ernst Jtinger into a modern vision of technology and a new political pattern of totalitarian nihilism. Over and above 'nihilism'and 'totalitarianism' as such …

Key Passage

In the Feschtschrift for Junger’s sixtieth birthday, Heidegger wrote: ‘Your work Der Arbeiter (1932) provides a description of European nihilism in the stage which succeeded the First World War. “Die totale Mobilmachung” (1930) is derived from your study; Der Arbeiter belongs to the stage of active nihilism’.20 Heidegger connected Junger’s modern technological vision with Nietzsche’s metaphysics. As he said: ‘The being in its entirety appears to you within the light and shade of the will-to-power, which Nietzsche interpreted as a doctrine of values’. (p.754)

Keywords

Nietzsche, Jünger, Nihilism, Totalitarianism, Heidegger, Political Theory, Technology, Revolution

Themes

On Jünger

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