This book presents a critical analysis of the theory of myth outlined by the twentieth-century German philosopher Hans Blumenberg. Angus Nicholls introduces the reader to Blumenberg's Work on Myth (1979), as well as to its broader intellectual background and its relationship to other eighteenth-, nineteenth- and twentieth-century theories of myth. Nicholls also places Blumenberg's theory of myth within the political context of West Germany, drawing on Blumenberg's unpublished work to show that his theory of myth amounted to a reckoning with the legacy of National Socialism.
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'Nicholls has written not just the definitive study of Blumenberg as a theorist of myth, but also an excellent general introduction to this prolific yet mercurial thinker. His achievement is unrivalled in situating Blumenberg in the development of German thought and drawing persuasive connections between Blumenberg and his manifold influences and ancestors, acknowledged and not.' - Joe Paul Kroll, Leibniz Institute of European History, Mainz in Modern Language Review
'This book is a welcome addition to scholarship on Hans Blumenberg. It is clearly written and authoritative. It will introduce the thinking of Blumenberg to a wider audience, and acquaint readers with aspects of the intellectual context Blumenberg worked in.' - Alison Ross, Monash University in Iyyun: The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly
'I am fully convinced that this book will become an important tool in research and teaching, not only on the twentieth-century German philosopher Hans Blumenberg ...but in the wider areas of myth and anthropology ... Nicholls' monograph is the very first comprehensive English-language introduction to Blumenberg's theory of myth, but even compared with introductions that are available in German, it is unique in its commitment to making Blumenberg's arguments accessible combined with an extraordinary depth of scholarship on his intellectual background ... Nicholls' remarkable familiarity not only with Blumenberg's extensive and published and unpublished oeuvre ... but also with the many discourses and disciplines with which it is interwoven, makes this book a treasure trove for anybody with an interest in philology, myth, phenomenology, anthropology, or the intellectual life in 20th century Germany.' - Tina-Karen Pusse, National University of Ireland, Galway, in History of the Human Sciences
'Nicholls' Buch ist eine verständliche und gut strukturierte Darstellung [...] der verwickelten Bezüge und anspruchsvollen Problemstellungen, mit denen sich Blumenberg im Kontext von Arbeit am Mythos beschäftigt und die auch darüber hinaus gehende, sein Gesamtwerk einbeziehende Diskussionen bietet. Da diese aber für die Leser eher selten offen an der Textoberfläche liegen, ist deren geduldige und kenntnisreiche Explikation, die Nicholls mit seinem Buch unternimmt, nicht eben wenig und für die Blumenberg-Forschung ein eindeutiger Gewinn ... Wie er [Nicholls] die politische Brisanz, die bei Blumenbergs Arbeit am Mythos und in dem erst aus dem Nachlass unter dem Titel Präfiguration veröffentlichten dazu gehörigen Manuskripten mitschwingt, behutsam und genau im Kontext der Ideengeschichte der Bundesrepublik verortet, ist schlicht brillant.' - Sebastian Lederle, Universität Wien, in Journal of Literary Theory
"... a wonderful resource for readers unfamiliar with Blumenberg since much of this material summarizes current Blumenberg scholarship. Experienced Blumenberg readers will also find new insights from these chapters." - Spencer Hawkins, University of Notre Dame, in The Goethe Yearbook
"Myth and the Human Sciences ... has a great deal to recommend it. It is incredibly erudite and does a real service to scholarship, both in introducing Blumenberg's thought to new readers and in contextualizing it within key questions of 20th-century philosophy, such as how to understand human culture within a Darwinian framework of adaptation, whether myth should be understood as an earlier stage in the development of reason, and what the political implications of embracing myth are, particularly in the wake of the Third Reich's self-mythologizing." - Liane F. Carlson, New York University in Reading Religion
'This book is a welcome addition to scholarship on Hans Blumenberg. It is clearly written and authoritative. It will introduce the thinking of Blumenberg to a wider audience, and acquaint readers with aspects of the intellectual context Blumenberg worked in.' - Alison Ross, Monash University in Iyyun: The Jerusalem Philosophical Quarterly
'I am fully convinced that this book will become an important tool in research and teaching, not only on the twentieth-century German philosopher Hans Blumenberg ...but in the wider areas of myth and anthropology ... Nicholls' monograph is the very first comprehensive English-language introduction to Blumenberg's theory of myth, but even compared with introductions that are available in German, it is unique in its commitment to making Blumenberg's arguments accessible combined with an extraordinary depth of scholarship on his intellectual background ... Nicholls' remarkable familiarity not only with Blumenberg's extensive and published and unpublished oeuvre ... but also with the many discourses and disciplines with which it is interwoven, makes this book a treasure trove for anybody with an interest in philology, myth, phenomenology, anthropology, or the intellectual life in 20th century Germany.' - Tina-Karen Pusse, National University of Ireland, Galway, in History of the Human Sciences
'Nicholls' Buch ist eine verständliche und gut strukturierte Darstellung [...] der verwickelten Bezüge und anspruchsvollen Problemstellungen, mit denen sich Blumenberg im Kontext von Arbeit am Mythos beschäftigt und die auch darüber hinaus gehende, sein Gesamtwerk einbeziehende Diskussionen bietet. Da diese aber für die Leser eher selten offen an der Textoberfläche liegen, ist deren geduldige und kenntnisreiche Explikation, die Nicholls mit seinem Buch unternimmt, nicht eben wenig und für die Blumenberg-Forschung ein eindeutiger Gewinn ... Wie er [Nicholls] die politische Brisanz, die bei Blumenbergs Arbeit am Mythos und in dem erst aus dem Nachlass unter dem Titel Präfiguration veröffentlichten dazu gehörigen Manuskripten mitschwingt, behutsam und genau im Kontext der Ideengeschichte der Bundesrepublik verortet, ist schlicht brillant.' - Sebastian Lederle, Universität Wien, in Journal of Literary Theory
"... a wonderful resource for readers unfamiliar with Blumenberg since much of this material summarizes current Blumenberg scholarship. Experienced Blumenberg readers will also find new insights from these chapters." - Spencer Hawkins, University of Notre Dame, in The Goethe Yearbook
"Myth and the Human Sciences ... has a great deal to recommend it. It is incredibly erudite and does a real service to scholarship, both in introducing Blumenberg's thought to new readers and in contextualizing it within key questions of 20th-century philosophy, such as how to understand human culture within a Darwinian framework of adaptation, whether myth should be understood as an earlier stage in the development of reason, and what the political implications of embracing myth are, particularly in the wake of the Third Reich's self-mythologizing." - Liane F. Carlson, New York University in Reading Religion