Die Sprache lügt nicht – Victor Klemperer
Lecture by Heidrun Kämper (Mannheim) as part of the online lecture series »Linguistic Criticism as Historical Reflection in the Early Twentieth Century«
This colloquium approaches linguistic criticism in a fundamental manner: In the early twentieth century, it formed a downright epistemic-sociological discipline at the intersection of political diagnoses of the times and general philosophical essay writing. As such, it had little to do with linguistic criticism in the narrower sense; rather, the focus was the production of a skeptical conception of history through recourse to language. This colloquium focuses on whether this constitutes an independent sub-genre of philosophy of history that manifested itself in linguistic thought. It moreover relates to the fact that the classical canon of modern linguistic criticism includes a notable amount of Jewish intellectuals, such as Moritz Lazarus, Hermann Steinthal, Fritz Mauthner, Gustav Landauer, Karl Kraus, Alfred Kerr, Walter Benjamin, and Victor Klemperer.
The presentations explore the extent to which linguistic reflections were pertinent for Jewish scholars and intellectuals in the early twentieth century to capture in words the dangerous side of modernity and thereby simultaneously to investigate questions of belonging and self-understanding. This colloquium allows for reflection both on the individual arguments of early linguistic criticism in particular as well as generally on the retrospectively impressive faith in the ability to reform a precarious political present through thinking about the dangers of false language.
31st January 2019, 5.15–6.45 p.m. (CEST); 11.15 a.m. to 12.45 p.m. (EST)
Dubnow Institute