9780914386520-0914386522-Eumeswil

Eumeswil

ISBN-13: 9780914386520
ISBN-10: 0914386522
Edition: Reprint
Author: Ernst Jünger, Russell A. Berman, Joachim Neugroschel
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Telos Press Publishing
Format: Paperback 330 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780914386520
ISBN-10: 0914386522
Edition: Reprint
Author: Ernst Jünger, Russell A. Berman, Joachim Neugroschel
Publication date: 2015
Publisher: Telos Press Publishing
Format: Paperback 330 pages

Summary

Eumeswil (ISBN-13: 9780914386520 and ISBN-10: 0914386522), written by authors Ernst Jünger, Russell A. Berman, Joachim Neugroschel, was published by Telos Press Publishing in 2015. With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Eumeswil (Paperback) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $3.96.

Description

Eumeswil, ostensibly a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel, is effectively a comprehensive synthesis of Ernst Jünger's mature thought, with a particular focus on new and achievable forms of individual freedom in a technologically monitored and managed postmodern world. Here Jünger first fully develops his figure of the anarch, the inwardly liberated and outwardly pragmatic individual, who lives peacefully in the heart of Leviathan and is yet able to preserve his individuality and freedom. Composed of a series of short passages and fragments, Eumeswil follows the reflections of Martin Venator, a historian living in a futuristic city-state ruled by a dictator known as the Condor. Through Venator, the prototypical anarch, Jünger offers a broad and uniquely insightful analysis of history from the post-historic perspective and, at the same time, presents a vision of future technological developments, including astonishingly prescient descriptions of today's internet (the luminar), smartphone (the phonophore), and genetic engineering. At once a study of accommodation to tyranny and a libertarian vision of individual freedom, Eumeswil continues to speak to the contradictions and possibilities inherent in our twenty-first-century condition.

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