Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy in Light of the Unpublished Seminars of 1933-1935
Emmanuel Faye
Trans. Michael B. Smith, foreword Tom Rockmore
New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009
Read Part 1 here.
Two.
Faye’s Argument
Heidegger’s seminars of 1933 and 1934, in Emmanuel Faye’s view, expose the “fiction” that separates Heidegger’s philosophy from his politics. For these seminars reveal a [...]
Editor’s Note: Sven Hedin was one of the twentieth century’s greatest explorers. He was also a masterful writer who produced many gripping memoirs of his travels and discoveries in Central Asia, Mongolia, and the Himalayas. Hedin was one quarter Jewish (his mother’s father was a Jew). This fact was known to Hitler and the other [...]
Published:
January 12, 2010 | Posted in General | Also tagged National Socialism, Nobel Prize, Sven Hedin, Sweden |
Avant-Garde Fascism: The Mobilization of Myth, Art, and Culture in France, 1909–1939
Mark Antliff
Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2007
Mark Antliff, a professor of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies at Duke University, has put together a useful analysis of the cultural-aesthetic memes utilized by French fascists of 1909-1939 to promote their visions of national [...]
Published:
October 31, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged Alex Kurtagic, anti-Semitism, archaeofuturism, art, avant-garde, Avant-Garde Fascism, Benito Mussolini, book reviews, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu, fascism, French fascism, Furturism, Georges Sorel, Georges Valois, Iron Guard, Italian fascism, Mark Antliff, myth, National Socialism, para-fascism, Philippe Lamour, progress, Romanian fascism, technology, Ted Sallis, urban life |
Editor’s Note: For the first part of this review essay on Dominique Venner’ s Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen (Paris: Éds. du Rocher, 2009), click here.
4. Der Arbeiter
Jünger’s nationalist politics turned out to be a passing phase in his long life. By 1930, after the wind started to go from the revolutionary-nationalist sails and [...]
Published:
September 10, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged book reviews, commercial society, Dominique Venner, Ernst Jünger, Martin Heidegger, Michael O'Meara, National Socialism, nihilism, technology, warrior ethics, World War II |
Dominique Venner
Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen
Paris: Éds. du Rocher, 2009
In Dominique Venner’s historical essay, Ernst Jünger: Un autre destin européen, the subject is presented as une figure ultime, a European archetype provisionally absent from Europe today, but nevertheless one rooted in the depths of the European spirit — and destined, thus, to re-appear should [...]
Published:
September 8, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged book reviews, commercial society, communism, Dominique Venner, Ernst Jünger, Marxism, Michael O'Meara, National Bolshevism, National Socialism, the Conservative Revolution, warrior ethics, Weimar Germany, World War I |
The United States believes that it has the right to interfere in the affairs of any country for any reason. Comparisons to Nazi Germany aren’t apt, because the Nazis would’ve never had the gall to claim that nuclear proliferation on the Korean or Indian peninsulas was any of their business.
All this requires a well-oiled [...]
Published:
September 6, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged American stupidity, satire |
“70 Years After—Did Hitler Really Want War?”
Vdare.com, August 31, 2009
On Sept. 1, 1939, 70 years ago, the German Army crossed the Polish frontier. On Sept. 3, Britain declared war.
Six years later, 50 million Christians and Jews had perished. Britain was broken and bankrupt, Germany a smoldering ruin. Europe had [...]
Published:
September 1, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged Patrick Buchanan, Winston Churchill, World War II |
Editor’s Note: Since his death in Venice on February 13, 1883, Richard Wagner has said not one unkind word about the Jews. Jews, however, have not returned the favor. In all fairness, however, Jews have also numbered among Wagner’s most important promoters and performers. Although I am a Wagnerphile, I am not one who will [...]
Published:
July 21, 2009 | Posted in General | Also tagged anti-Semitism, classical music, Der Ring des Niebelungen, Jewish hysteria, Jewish influence, Jewish power, Los Angeles Opera, Richard Wagner, Ring cycle, the holocaust |
Editor’s Note: The following article is from Euro-Synergies, July 12, 2009. It is my translation of Robert Steuckers’ translation of a June 24, 2009 item from the Flemish ’t Pallierterke website. I have altered the title and section headings.
In 2009, we mark the 150th birthday of Knut Hamsun (1859-1952). The Norwegian novelist, born Knut Pedersen, [...]
Editor’s Note: The following sketch of Knut Hamsun’s life and work should be supplemented by Mark Deavin’s discussion here of Hamsun’s greatest book, Growth of The Soil, for which he won the Nobel prize for literature. See also Robert Ferguson’s biography Enigma: The Life of Knut Hamsun. Also noteworthy is Knut Hamsun Remembers America: Essays [...]