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Posthumous peoplePosthumous people

Posthumous people

Vienna at the turning point

Massimo Cacciari

About this book

Friedrich Nietzsche imagined himself belonging to a society of visionaries, thinkers, architects, poets, musicians, and artists running ahead of the mainstream. They were condemned to be misunderstood or ignored in the present, but their work would become significant in the future. To them he addressed the aphorism from which Massimo Cacciari's book takes its name, saying "It is only after death that we will enter our life and come alive, oh, very much alive, we posthumous people!". Cacciari isolates Vienna as the European capital of posthumous people at a crucial turning point in Western thinking, as the nineteenth century ended. There he finds Ludwig Wittgenstein, together with Peter Altenberg, Robert Walser, Lou Andreas-Salome, Adolf Loos, Martin Buber, Egon Schiele, Karl Kraus, Gustav Klimt, and many others. Cacciari treats this extraordinarily rich concentration of activity as the hub upon which European culture wheeled into the twentieth century. He reaches directly to the intellectual content in each of the various figures he discusses.

Details

OL Work ID
OL862457W

Subjects

Politics and cultureSocial life and customsCivilizationIntellectualsIntellectual lifeBiographyIntelllectualsVienna (austria), historyAustria, politics and governmentAustria, social life and customsAustria, civilizationAustria, biographyIntellectuals, europe

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.