from Book Reviews
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2018
This book provides a deeply researched introduction to Hans Blumenberg's theory of myth, largely by highlighting the influence of well-known and forgotten thinkers on Blumenberg's thought. In its historiographical detail, it reads almost like a work of Blumenberg's own hand—a self-reflexivity the author acknowledges in the prologue's title, “A Story about the Telling of Stories” (1). Chapters 1–4 are the most historical-documentary. They are a wonderful resource for readers unfamiliar with Blumenberg since much of this material summarizes current Blumenberg scholarship. Experienced Blumenberg readers will also find new insights from these chapters. Chapter 4, for instance, discusses Blumenberg's admiration for anthropologist Paul Alsberg's imaginative visions in his theory of Köperausschaltung, humanity's ever growing ability to engage its surroundings across physical distances, first with long-range weapons, later with concepts (111–16).
Chapter 5, on the reception history of Prometheus myths, prepares the ground for the ambitious argumentation of Chapter 6, on Blumenberg's theory of mythic reception events through the example of Goethe's self-fashioning as a Promethean writer. Chapter 7 and 8 are equally ambitious. They respond to Götz Müller's criticism that Work on Myth does not discuss “the dangerous proliferation of modern myths.” Nicholls presents “political polytheism” as Blumenberg's answer to Schmitt's political theology (200, 210–15). Nicholls then explicates Blumenberg's unpublished diagnosis of Hitler's narcissistic mythology (238, also see Präfiguration). Hitler's delusions negate Blumenberg's ideal by denying the checks and balances found in the polytheistic division of powers.
Blumenberg is challenging to read because he conducts theory through examples, implicitly reducing the theory to a description of the examples. For instance, Höhlenausgänge (Cave Exits), the last major work Blumenberg published during his lifetime, enlists “leaving the cave” as a myth of emerging human civilization, but gives little theorization of myth or metaphor. Instead we learn about the pathos of intellectual history and about the pathos of caves. If analysis does not drive the last nail into the coffin of myth, as jokes can be explained to death, Blumenberg uses narrative to persuade us that cavernous spaces affect us emotionally because they are, always already, an effective metaphor for human emergence.
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