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Gadamer's Repercussions: Reconsidering Philosophical Hermeneutics

By: Bruce Krajewski | Book details

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NOTES
1
See, for example, Paul Morrison, The Poetics of Fascism: Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, Paul de Man (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996); Adam Gopnik, “The GetReady Man [on Cioran], The New Yorker (June 19 and 26, 2000), 172–80; Tom Rockmore and Joseph Margolis, eds., The Heidegger Case: On Philosophy and Politics (Philadelphia, Penn.: Temple University Press, 1992); and Steven Ungar, Scandal and Aftereffect: Blanchot and France since 1930 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995).

North American analytic philosophy has not been immune to similar scrutiny. See John McCumber's Time in the Ditch: American Philosophy and the McCarthy Era (Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press, 2001).

2
Richard Wolin, “Untruth and Method: Nazism and the Complicities of HansGeorg Gadamer, The New Republic (May 15, 2000): 36–45. See also the Internationale Zeitschrift für Philosophie 1 (2001), which is entitled Schwerpunktthema: Hermeneutik

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