Monash University
Browse
Dalton.pdf (153.44 kB)

Man is the Indestructible: Blanchot’s Obscure Humanism

Download (153.44 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-21, 03:55 authored by John Dalton
Following the death of God, it is said, ‘Man’ takes the stage, his emergence the necessary event of history. Yet the end of man is the ‘corre-late’ of the death of God. The space occupied by divinity, or the sacred, has withdrawn. Humanism attests to a mimesis of the transcendental theme, and unwittingly confirms the emptiness of a sign without origin. Humanism announces nothing new: the nihilism at the heart of onto-theology emerges fully. Its hypocrisy and pretension fatally exposed, humanism may now – and ought to be – discarded as a ‘metaphysics of the subject,’ a regime of negativity, exclusion and violence.

History

Publication date

2005

Issue

10

Document type

Article

Usage metrics

    Colloquy: Text, Theory, Critique

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC