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The Young Kierkegaard as a Student of Liunge’s Kjøbenhavnsposten

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Published/Copyright: July 11, 2023
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Abstract

Kierkegaard is well known for his quick wit and sharp polemics against his opponents. One of his favorite targets was the poet, dramatist, and philosopher, Johan Ludvig Heiberg (1791 – 1860). Perhaps the best-known element of his critique was Heiberg’s outspoken Hegelian campaign. Before Kierkegaard’s famous criticisms of Heiberg, he learned the craft of literary polemics by reading the lively discussions in the Danish journals of the time. In this article it is argued that the role of the journal Kjøbenhavnsposten for Kierkegaard has never been appreciated. This journal was edited by Andreas Peter Liunge (1798 – 1879), who was a great adversary of Heiberg and his Kjøbenhavns flyvende Post. The article shows that the often satirical use of Hegel by Kjøbenhavnsposten to criticize Heiberg anticipates Kierkegaard’s strategy of critique with regard to Heiberg and other figures in the Danish Hegelian movement.

This work was produced at the Institute of Philosophy of the Slovak Academy of Sciences, v.v.i. It was supported by the Agency VEGA under the project “The Principle of Humanity in the Context of Contemporary Conflicts. Existential and Phenomenological Challenges,” VEGA 2/0130/23.

Published Online: 2023-07-11
Published in Print: 2023-07-11

© 2023 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Titlepages
  2. Titlepages
  3. Preface
  4. Contents
  5. Section 1: Interpreting Kierkegaard’s Works
  6. Section 1:   Interpreting Kierkegaard’s Works
  7. ‘No One Was As Great As Abraham’: Exemplarity and the Failure of Hermeneutical Refiguration in Fear and Trembling
  8. Kierkegaards Begriff Angst als „gottesfürchtige Satire“
  9. Seeing as the Eccentric Lover: An Exploration into Vision, Forgiveness, and Anamorphic Dynamic in Kierkegaard’s “Love Hides a Multitude of Sins”
  10. Section 2: Concepts and Problems in Kierkegaard
  11. Section 2:   Concepts and Problems in Kierkegaard
  12. Kierkegaard and the Figure of the Philistine: a Negative Way of Highlighting Existence
  13. Is There a Suspension of Subjectivity?
  14. The Call to Selfhood: Kierkegaard, Narrative Unity, and the Achievement of Personal Identity
  15. Between Mood and Spirit: Kierkegaard’s Conception of Death as the Teacher of Earnestness
  16. “My Dear Reader—but to Whom Am I Speaking?” Kierkegaard Read with the Rhetorical Theory of Narrative
  17. “Forgiveness is forgiveness:” Kierkegaard’s Spiritual Acoustics
  18. Section 3: Kierkegaard’s Sources and Historical Context
  19. Section 3:   Kierkegaard’s Sources and Historical Context
  20. The Kantian Sublime Reflected in the Kierkegaardian Sublime
  21. Der Begriff Ernst. Zur Kritik ironischer Selbstverhältnisse bei Hegel und Kierkegaard
  22. The Young Kierkegaard as a Student of Liunge’s Kjøbenhavnsposten
  23. Section 4: Receptions of Kierkegaard’s Thought
  24. Section 4:   Receptions of Kierkegaard’s Thought
  25. Fast vergessen: Die Nachwirkungen von Kierkegaards Kulturkritik im Krisendiskurs der dänischen Nachkriegszeit
  26. The Hong Kong Reception of Kierkegaard: From the 1950s to the Present
  27. Kierkegaard: Existenzphilosoph nur im ‚Nebenberuf‘? Überlegungen im Anschluss an Jürgen Habermas
  28. Kierkegaard and Religionswissenschaft: A Source- and Reception-Historical Survey (Part 2)
  29. Articles
  30. Abbreviations
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