| Fifteen years
ago, revelations about the political
misdeeds of Martin Heidegger
and Paul de Man sent shock waves
throughout European and North
American intellectual circles.
Ever since, postmodernism has
been haunted by the specter of
a compromised past. In this intellectual
genealogy of the postmodern spirit,
Richard Wolin shows that postmodernism's
infatuation with fascism has
been widespread and not incidental.
He calls into question postmodernism's
claim to have inherited the mantle
of the left--and suggests that
postmodern thought has long been
smitten with the opposite end
of the political spectrum.
In
probing chapters on C. G. Jung,
Hans-Georg Gadamer, Georges Bataille,
and Maurice Blanchot, Wolin discovers
an unsettling commonality: during
the 1930s, these thinkers leaned
to the right and were tainted
by a proverbial "fascination
with fascism."
Frustrated by democracy's shortcomings,
they were seduced by fascism's
grandiose promises of political
regeneration. The dictatorships
in Italy and Germany promised redemption
from the uncertainties of political
liberalism. But, from the beginning,
there could be no doubting their
brutal methods of racism, violence,
and imperial conquest.
Postmodernism's
origins among the profascist
literati of the 1930s reveal
a dark political patrimony. The
unspoken affinities between Counter-Enlightenment
and postmodernism constitute
the guiding thread of Wolin's
suggestive narrative. In their
mutual hostility toward reason
and democracy, postmodernists
and the advocates of Counter-Enlightenment
betray a telltale strategic alliance--they
cohabit the fraught terrain where
far left and far right intersect.
Those who take
Wolin's conclusions to heart
will never view the history of
modern thought in quite the same
way. |