Fire in the Ashes: God, Evil, and the HolocaustDavid Patterson, John K. Roth University of Washington Press, 2012/03/15 - 336 ページ Sixty years after it ended, the Holocaust continues to leave survivors and their descendants, as well as historians, philosophers, and theologians, pondering the enormity of that event. This book explores how inquiry about the Holocaust challenges understanding, especially its religious and ethical dimensions. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-5 / 26
... argues, it is the false Dionysian god inspired by Friedrich Nietzsche, who declared the God of Abraham to be dead. Indeed, for Nietzsche, the death of the Judaic God was nothing to be mourned, as he blamed the Jews, whom he regarded as ...
... argues that the Nazis received from Nietzsche the notion of “violent cure” and the idea that they had “to be destroyers” (Wille zur Macht, 224).28 According to Steven Aschheim, Ernst Nolte believed that the Nietzschean and Nazi projects ...
... argues cogently that all Nazi architectural installations in Nuremberg were linked to the “National Socialist death cult, which is of central importance in all ceremonial events,”59 and which culminated in Hitler's solemn eastward ...
... argues that it was through Nietzsche's reading of the Greek myth that the Dionysus ideal gained influence on Nazism. This perception helps her bring together specific elements of National Socialism under one interpretive line: (1) the ...
... argues throughout his theology becomes even more apparent when Améry's understanding of his Jewishness is considered. From its starting point, Marquardt's theology cannot incorporate what Améry is saying because doing so would undermine ...
目次
3 | |
Searching Traditions | 109 |
Beyond the Ruins? | 215 |
The Disturbance of the Witness | 299 |
Bibliography | 307 |
About the Editors and Contributors | 329 |
Index | 335 |