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dc.contributor.advisorJennings, Michael W.en_US
dc.contributor.authorMcGillen, Michael J.en_US
dc.contributor.otherGerman Departmenten_US
dc.date.accessioned2012-08-01T19:34:56Z-
dc.date.available2016-05-03T05:12:05Z-
dc.date.issued2012en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp011j92g7507-
dc.description.abstractFollowing a long process of the historicization of thought from Schiller and Hegel through nineteenth-century historicism, a critical point was reached in the 1920s in Germany: the status of history as such--its representability, its narrative structure, the way that it informs thought and experience--emerged as a pressing cultural problem. This study shows how a new concept of eschatology in the theological discourse of Karl Barth, Paul Tillich, Franz Rosenzweig, Rudolf Bultmann, and Martin Heidegger played a pivotal role in the crisis and reinvention of history in German modernism. These writers produced an array of new temporal and historical concepts--from kairos, to contemporaneity, to the eschatological now, to the reversal of beginning and end--that radically challenged the historicist understanding of history as a teleologically-driven process of linear development that forms a totality. This theological intervention in the construction of history is a crucial moment in German modernism, one that stands in dialogue with secular cultural formations from historiography, to literature, to the arts. Uncovering the affinities of theological discourse with the art of Russian Constructivism and the Neue Sachlichkeit, the theory of historiography of Karl Mannheim and Ernst Troeltsch, and the literary work of Bertolt Brecht, Ernst Bloch, and Georg Lukács, this study shows how German theology in the 1920s plays a key role in the modernist avant-garde that has yet to be recognized. Drawing on modernist principles of spatial construction and non-objective modes of representation, Barth, Tillich, Rosenzweig, Bultmann, and Heidegger produced a modernist concept of eschatology that is fundamentally incommensurable with history and could no longer be secularized as the telos of world history or the "end of time." Instead, eschatology was understood as the "limit" of history that stands in dialectical tension to each moment, one that exposes the groundlessness of historical experience and its disjunction with itself. Such a negative theology called into question the continuity and developmental logic of history. Yet it also pointed to new possibilities for the construction of the present moment as a moment without history, a space for self-reflection cut loose from the narrative of history.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherPrinceton, NJ : Princeton Universityen_US
dc.relation.isformatofThe Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the <a href=http://catalog.princeton.edu> library's main catalog </a>en_US
dc.subjectAestheticsen_US
dc.subjectEschatologyen_US
dc.subjectHistoricismen_US
dc.subjectModernismen_US
dc.subjectTemporalityen_US
dc.subjectTheologyen_US
dc.subject.classificationGermanic literatureen_US
dc.subject.classificationPhilosophy of Religionen_US
dc.titleEschatology and the Reinvention of History: Theological Interventions in German Modernism, 1920-1938en_US
dc.typeAcademic dissertations (Ph.D.)en_US
pu.projectgrantnumber690-2143en_US
pu.embargo.terms2016-05-03-
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