Carl Schmitt and Ahasver. The Idea of the State and the Wandering Jew
Author(s) -
Galit HasanRokem
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
behemoth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1866-2447
DOI - 10.1524/behe.2008.0012
Subject(s) - leviathan (cipher) , embodied cognition , political theology , philosophy , state (computer science) , politics , midrash , epistemology , literature , aesthetics , sociology , art , theology , law , political science , judaism , algorithm , computer science , statistics , mathematics
In this article the cultural effects and the specific reverberations in Carl Schmitt’s work of two literary figures emerging in vastly different cultural contexts in the 16th century, Leviathan and the Wandering Jew, are analyzed using a pair of discursive concepts – political theology and Midrash. My aim is to show that whereas Schmitt was informed by the kind of stereotypical thinking embodied in the legendary and very popular figure of Ahasver, the figure itself was suppressed and replaced by a seemingly rational political discourse addressing Leviathan
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