ABSTRACT

This book focuses on the interpretations of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit that have proved influential over the past decades. Current readers of Hegel’s Phenomenology face an abundance of interpretive literature devoted to this difficult text and confront a plethora of different philosophical presuppositions, research strategies and hermeneutic efforts.To enable a better orientation within the interpretative landscape, the essays in this volume summarize, contextualize and critically comment on the issues and currents in contemporary Phenomenology scholarship. There is a common set of three questions that each of the contributions seeks to answer: (1) What kind of text is The Phenomenology of Spirit? (2) What do the different strategies of interpretation conceptually bring to the text? (3) How do different interpreters justify their verdict on whether the Phenomenology is still a viable project?

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

On Meta-Readings

chapter 2|16 pages

“Now is the Night”

Deixis in Hegel and Maldiney

chapter 3|25 pages

Truth and (its) Appearance in Hegel's Phenomenology

Brandom, Pippin and Houlgate on Geist and Consciousness

chapter 4|22 pages

Masters, Slaves, and Us

The Ongoing Allure of the Struggle for Recognition

chapter 6|16 pages

Self-Consciousness and Alienation

The Young Marx's Reception on Hegel's Master–Slave Dialectic

chapter 7|17 pages

Hegel on Death 1

chapter 8|17 pages

“Heroism Without Fate, Self-Consciousness Without Alienation”

Antigone, Trust and the Narrative Structure of Spirit

chapter 9|19 pages

Hegel Versus Subjective Duties and External Reasons

Recent Readings of “Morality” and “Conscience” in The Phenomenology of Spirit

chapter 10|10 pages

On Comay on Hegel 1

chapter 13|20 pages

Absolute Mapping

Jameson's Variations on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit

chapter 14|12 pages

The Last Sigh of Absolute Knowledge

Schiller's Friendship and Hegel's Readers