Home Heidegger and the signs of history
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Heidegger and the signs of history

  • Jonathan Hope EMAIL logo
Published/Copyright: July 15, 2015

Abstract

Heidegger’s conception of the sign formulated in Sein und Zeit (1996 [1927]) may shed some light on his disastrous, philosophical and political experience with Nazism. In order to show this, I propose to assess how Heidegger establishes the relationship between signs and history in his magnum opus. Then, relying on the fact – central to Heidegger’s thinking, and to sign studies in general – that ideas are linked to the world, I will proceed to examine how Heidegger’s philosophical meditations stand up to his real-life engagements. My final remarks, more interrogative than declarative, will raise the question as to how Heidegger was lured into believing that Nazism represented a moment of truth.

Acknowledgment

I would like to thank Professor Martine Delvaux (UQAM) whose precious insights helped me articulate this essay.

References

Barash, Jeffrey.1988. Martin Heidegger and the problem of historical meaning. Bronx: Fordham University Press.10.1007/978-94-009-3579-2Search in Google Scholar

Beistegui, Miguel de. 1998. Heidegger and the political dystopias. Oxford: Routledge.Search in Google Scholar

Brohm, Jean-Marie, RogerDadoun & FabienOllier. 2007. Heidegger, le berger du néant. Critique d’une pensée politique. Paris: Éditions Homnisphères.Search in Google Scholar

Cobley, Paul & AntiRandviir.2009. Introduction: What is sociosemiotics? Semiotica173(1/4). 139.10.1515/SEMI.2009.001Search in Google Scholar

Dastur, Françoise. 1990. Heidegger et la question du temps. Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Search in Google Scholar

Farías, Victor. 1987. Heidegger et le nazisme. Paris: Verdier.Search in Google Scholar

Faye, Emmanuel.2005. Heidegger, l’introduction du nazisme dans la philosophie. Autour des séminaires inédits de 1933–1935. Paris: Albin Michel.Search in Google Scholar

Fukuyama, Francis.1992. The end of history and the last man. New York: Free Press.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1996 [1927]. Being and time, Joan Stambaugh (trans.). Albany: State University of New York Press.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1991 [1933]. The self-assertion of the German university, William Lewis (trans.). In RichardWolin (ed.), The Heidegger controversy: A critical reader, 2939. New York: Columbia University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1985 [1945]. The rectorate 1933/34: Facts and thoughts , Karsten Harries (trans.). Review of Metaphysics38(3). 467502.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1991 [1945]. Letter to the rector of Freiburg university, November 4, 1945, Richard Wolin (trans.). In RichardWolin (ed.), The Heidegger controversy: A critical reader, 6166. New York: Columbia University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.2002 [1945]. Heidegger on the art of teaching, Valerie Allen & Ares Axiotis (trans. & ed.). In MichaelPeters (ed.), Heidegger, education, and modernity, 2745. Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1988 [1946]. Letter on humanism, Frank Capuzzi (trans.). In WilliamMcNeill (ed.), Pathmarks, 239276. New York: Cambridge University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Heidegger, Martin.1993 [1966]. Only a God can save us. Der Spiegel’s interview with Martin Heidegger, Maria Alter & John Caputo (trans.). In RichardWolin (ed.), The Heidegger controversy: A critical reader, 91116. New York: Columbia University Press.Search in Google Scholar

Hope, Jonathan.2014. The sign in Heidegger’s Sein und Zeit. Semiotica202(1/4). 259271.10.1515/sem-2014-0055Search in Google Scholar

Jolivet, Servanne.2009. Heidegger. Le sens de l’histoire (1912–1927). Paris: Presses universitaires de France.Search in Google Scholar

Raffoul, François. 2011. Heidegger and the aporia of history . Poligrafi16(61–62). 91118.Search in Google Scholar

Wolin, Richard.1990. The politics of being: The political thought of Martin Heidegger. New York: Columbia University Press.10.7312/woli93972Search in Google Scholar

Žižek, Slavoj. 1999. The ticklish subject: The absent center of political ontology. London: Verso.Search in Google Scholar

Published Online: 2015-7-15
Published in Print: 2015-10-1

©2015 by De Gruyter Mouton

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Frontmatter
  2. Sports utility semiotics: A semantic differential study of symbolic potential in automobile design
  3. Making meaning in women’s spiritual autobiography: Language, materiality, and agency in colonial New Granada
  4. What is the proper characterization of the alphabet? VII: Sleight of hand
  5. Towards a semiotics of multilingualism
  6. In the arena: Communication between animals and Christians in damnatio ad bestias
  7. Dire l’indicible et décrire l’indescriptible: Ressources imagières et linguistiques des poilus
  8. Mathematics and Peirce’s semiotic
  9. Icarus ignored: Riffaterre and Eagleton on Auden’s Musée des Beaux Arts
  10. The “monster” of Seymour Avenue: Internet crime news and Gothic reportage in the case of Ariel Castro
  11. Kenneth L. Pike and science fiction
  12. Environmental communications: The reader’s perspective
  13. A Peircean typology of cultural prime symbols: Culture as category
  14. The poetry of sound and the sound of poetry: Navajo poetry, phonological iconicity, and linguistic relativity
  15. The language of fashion in postmodern society: A social semiotic perspective
  16. From Saussure to sociology and back to linguistics: Niklas Luhmann’s reception of signifiant/signifié and langue/parole as the basis for a model of language change
  17. The machine or the garden: Semiotics and the American yard
  18. Photogénie as “the Other” of the semiotics of cinema: On Yuri Lotman’s concept of “the mythological”
  19. Who said it? Voices in news translation, from a semiotic perspective
  20. Why semiotics, why poetry?
  21. How brands (don’t) do things: Corporate branding as practices of imagining “commens
  22. Film space as mental space
  23. Netizen communicology: China daily and the Internet construction of group culture
  24. Questions toward a Peircean phenomenological description of association
  25. Colonial bodies: Slavery, wage-slavery, and the representation of race
  26. Discourse analysis with Peirce? Making sense of discursive regularities: The case of online university prospectuses
  27. Heidegger and the signs of history
  28. To be continued: meaning-making in serialized manga as functional-multimodal narrative
  29. Empiricism within the limits of postmodernism alone: On the emergence of the logically real within the multi-perspectival field
  30. Propaganda mala fide: Towards a comparative semiotics of violent religious persuasion
  31. Review article
  32. Peircean visual semiotics: Potentials to be explored
Downloaded on 14.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/sem-2015-0048/html
Scroll to top button