This collection of essays by one of the foremost figures in contemporary theory takes as its theme the edge or limit between language, time, history, and politics. These are essays that are allonthe brink, the very extreme at which one can no longer define where one is located, neither on the cliff, say, nor over the edge. To be on the brink is to take up that extreme limit, the point of contamination or indetermination where language, time, history, and politics all converge upon one another.
On the Brink begins with a consideration of Kants treatment of time as representation and of Hegels treatment of the writing of history and the end of art, all while taking up other key figures in the history of philosophy. The book then moves to an exploration of language in a variety of manifestations, from translation to complaint and greeting. It concludes by analyzing political and social questions that continue to haunt us todaythe conception of work, not least in National Socialism, and our relationship to democracy. Taken together, Werner Hamachers essays offer trenchant historical, political, and rhetorical interventions into the history of philosophy, literature, and our contemporary political situation.
Werner Hamacher (19482017) was the founder and director of the Institute of General and Comparative Literature at the University of Frankfurt and Emmanuel Levinas Chair at the European Graduate School. His many publications includePleroma: Reading in Hegel (1997),Premises: Essays on Philosophy and Literature from Kant to Celan (1999),Minima Philologica (2015), andTwo Studies of Friedrich Hölderlin (2020).
Jan Plug is professor of English at the University of Western Ontario.
1. Ex Tempore: Time as Representation in Kant / 2. On Some Differences Between the History of Literary and the History of Phenomenal Events / 3. (The End of Art with the Mask) / 4. Contraductions / 5. Notes on Greeting / 6. Remarks on Complaint / 7. Uncalled: A Commentary on Kafkas The Test / 8. Working Through Working / 9. Sketches Toward a Lecture on Democracy / 10. Amphora