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Carl Schmitt’s Concept of History

Boekbijdrage - Hoofdstuk

In many of his political writings, Carl Schmitt engages in a struggle around the very conditions of possibility for conflict and struggle to become visible and recognizable. He wages a metapolitical struggle, against depoliticizing “types of spirit” and for “the political”. The meaning of history is a crucial terrain for this metapolitical struggle: friends and enemies are symbolized and rendered (in)visible through historical discourses. Schmitt strongly rejects representations of history which tend to obfuscate its political nature, such as ideologies of progress or the idea of repetition in history. Instead, he advocates a sober and profane image of history, acknowledging its plural and contingent nature. Paradoxically, a figure of theological provenance, the katechon, is the minimal rest of an eschatological vision that Schmitt considers necessary to keep history and theology apart and to maintain an open and profane understanding of history.
Boek: The Oxford Handbook of Carl Schmitt
Pagina's: 401 - 425
ISBN:9780199916931
Jaar van publicatie:2017