Theoriekurs Philosophy of History

BISR

06.-27.06.18
Mittwochs, 18.30-21.30 Uhr

Goethe-Institut New York

Does history have a direction, a purpose, or an end goal? Can we deduce general historical patterns from studying the past? Is it naïve to hope and work for a better future? From the Enlightenment to the 21st century, liberal, Marxist, positivist, and post-structuralist thinkers have offered radically different responses to these fundamental questions related to the philosophy of history. This course will survey these attempts to grapple with the meaning and nature of history and highlight the ways in which different modes of narrating the past undergird contemporary political and philosophical projects.

Beginning with foundational works by Kant, Schiller, and Hegel, this course will explore the impulse to account for historical time outside of explicitly religious frameworks alongside other Enlightenment projects that placed humans at the center of their analysis. We will then examine seminal critiques of these early efforts, from Marx’s The German Ideology to Nietzsche’s “The Uses and Abuses of History.” Finally, we will consider 20th-century critiques of the idea of historical progress, from Benjamin’s “angel of history” to Foucault’s disciplinary society. We will ask: are we progressing, and what kind of question is this? What is at stake by thinking of history as a science versus an act of narration? How do ecological and geographic forces impact our ability to place humans at the center of historical narratives? And how do philosophies of history pervade contemporary discussions of everything from politics to science to culture and beyond?

Instructor: Suzanne Schneider

Suzanne Schneider is the Deputy Director of BISR. An interdisciplinary scholar working in the fields of history, religious studies, and political theory, Suzanne’s research interests relate to Jewish and Islamic modernism, religious movements in the modern Middle East, the history of modern Palestine/Israel, secularism, and political identity. She is the author of Mandatory Separation: Religion, Education, and Mass Politics in Palestine (Stanford University Press) and a regular contributor to The Revealer: A Review of Religion and Media.

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