1: Introduction: Heidegger and Theology after the Black Notebooks
2: Religion in the Black Notebooks: Overview and Analysis
3: In the Spirit of Paul: Thinking the Hebraic Inheritance (Heidegger, Bultmann, Jonas)
4: Why Heidegger Didn’t Like Catholic Theology: The Case of Romano Guardini
5: Anarchist Singularities or Proprietorial Resentments? On the Christian Problem in Heidegger’s Notebooks of the 1930s
6: Monotheism as a Metapolitical Problem: Heidegger’s War against Jewish Christian Monotheism
7: Love Strong as Death: Jews against Heidegger (On the Issue of Finitude)
8: Apocalypse and the History of Being
9: Gottwesen and the De-Divinization of the Last God: Heidegger’s Meditation on the Strange and Incalculable
10: Confessions and Considerations: Heidegger’s Early Black Notebooks and his Lecture on Augustine’s Theory of Time
11: The Irritability of Being: Martin Heidegger, Hans Driesch and the Future of Theology
Mårten Björk is a doctoral student in Theology and Religious Studies at Gothenburg University, Sweden. He is the author and editor of two books in Swedish and has published several international articles. He contributes regularly to various Scandinavian magazines and is on the editorial board of the cultural journal Subaltern.
Jayne Svenungsson is Professor of Systematic Theology at Lund University, Sweden. She is the author of Divining History: Prophetism, Messianism and the Development of the Spirit (2016) and co-editor of Jewish Thought, Utopia and Revolution (2014), Monument and Memory (2015) and The Ethos of History: Time and Responsibility (2018).
This book probes the relationship between Martin Heidegger and theology in light of the discovery of his Black Notebooks, which reveal that his privately held Antisemitism and anti-Christian sentiments were profoundly intertwined with his philosophical ideas. Heidegger himself was deeply influenced by both Catholic and Protestant theology. This prompts the question as to what extent Christian anti-Jewish motifs shaped Heidegger’s own thinking in the first place. A second question concerns modern theology’s intellectual indebtedness to Heidegger. In this volume, an array of renowned Heidegger scholars – both philosophers and theologians –investigate Heidegger’s animosity toward the biblical legacy in both its Jewish and Christian interpretations, and what it means for the future task and identity of theology.