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Unspeakable trash

Heidegger, Philip K. Dick, and the philosophy of horror

Anthony Adler (Yonsei University)

pp. 339-370

Résumé

Apophatic thought has, from the beginning, involved an esoteric tendency: a prohibition on communication enforcing the boundary between sacred and profane. This chapter argues, however, that there is also an exoteric apophaticism: a nothingness, silence, or even unspeakable horror haunting and shadowing everyday life. Starting from a reading of Being and Time, Adler contrasts Heidegger's formal indication with a "material indication": whereas formal indication makes it possible to show possibility as possibility, material indication exposes an event without relation to possibility. Yet it is above all in the novel that we experience this event. After briefly considering Apuleius and Flaubert, Adler turns to Philip K. Dick, arguing that his science fiction, first published as "trashy" pulp fiction, involves a radical experience of an exoteric apophaticism. The chapter concludes with a discussion of the theoretical limits of the contemporary "philosophy of horror" of speculative realism, while pointing the way toward a phenomenology of "trashy literature."

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Brown Nahum, Simmons J Aaron (2017) Contemporary debates in negative theology and philosophy. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Pages: 339-370

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-65900-8_17

Citation complète:

Adler Anthony, 2017, Unspeakable trash: Heidegger, Philip K. Dick, and the philosophy of horror. In N. Brown & J.A. Simmons (eds.) Contemporary debates in negative theology and philosophy (339-370). Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.