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The Intolerable

  • Zsuzsa Baross
Published/Copyright: February 27, 2008
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From the journal Volume 38 Issue 2

Abstract

Of the three “uses of history” handed down to us by Nietzsche – not as inheritance, for nothing is more foreign to his untimely meditations, “for the sake of life and action,” than to indebt the future to a past – which use should be our model to fashion our relation to the future (Nietzsche 1983)? The heroic example of a “monumental history” that inspires weaker times by holding up before them the promise of the possibility of greatness once again? It is doubtful that our exhausted “desert time” could resuscitate the faith, mobilize the will to turn to some real or imaginary past as inspiration in order to fashion for itself, even if only as a copy, another future. Besides, it is precisely the will to fashion/fiction history that is censured by the negative object lesson of recent history – the histories of fascism, communism, of revolutions, nationalisms, dictatorships, totalitarian and totalizing projects of every kind. Their miserable failures prohibit our political imaginary all the more to dream of Nietzsche's other, “critical” path of actively forgetting the past and endowing ourselves with another history – in order to invent a future, not yet seen in history.

Published Online: 2008-02-27
Published in Print: 2003-10-14

© Walter de Gruyter

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Portrait of an Interdisciplinary Life. John Neubauer zum 70. Geburtstag
  2. Introduction
  3. Thought-Images: A Brief History of Time
  4. The Return of the Dinosaurs: About Scientific Imagination and its Affects
  5. Borders and Monuments: Goethe's Reconstruction of the World as Knowledge
  6. History, Theory and Abraham Gottlob Werner
  7. Mynheer Peeperkorn's Fever
  8. Introduction
  9. History, Empire, Opera
  10. Music Albums: A Tiny Gesamtkunstwerk?
  11. Listening to Kurt Schwitters' Ursonate. A Dadaistic-Romantic transposition d'arts?
  12. Introduction
  13. Reading Melling's Voyage pittoresque de Constantinople. Topography and Control
  14. Penumbra
  15. Bruno Freddi's Vissuto
  16. From Stony Facts to Paper Flowers
  17. Picturing It. The Issue of Visuality in the Classical Theory of Metaphor
  18. Introduction
  19. The Practical Use of Historiography: from Haffner to Herodotus
  20. The Gap between Hannah Arendt and Franz Kafka
  21. Literature and Art in History
  22. Cultural Memory, Cultural History and Cultural Canons in the Third Millennium
  23. Cross-border Histories
  24. Introduction
  25. The Intolerable
  26. History, Theory and the Middle Voice
  27. Sacred Memory or Relics: Should Holocaust Documents Be Altered?
  28. Blasting the Historical Continuum: Stories of my Grandmother
  29. Der Erlkönig in Sarajevo: Did the monument forecast the catastrophe?
  30. Introduction
  31. Hans Mayer – Ansichten eines komparatistischen Außenseiters
  32. Mastering Adolescence in the Age of Cultural Studies
  33. Bamboozled by Literature
  34. Arguments for a Cross-Cultural Literary History. Theoretical and Practical Implications
  35. Comparative Literary History, Theory and Practice: John Neubauer's Contribution
  36. “Rich Seeds We Must Sow … But If Only a Few Will Take”
  37. John Neubauer's Cultural Geographies
  38. The Marathon Man
  39. Embracing the Horizon
  40. Rezensionen
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