© Columbia University Press
September, 2009
Cloth, 178 pages,
ISBN: 978-0-231-14830-6
$40.00
/ £27.50
"A bold, ambitious read of the Heidegger legacy as manifest in six very different interpreters. Provocative from beginning to end." — William J. Richardson, Boston College
"What remains of Being after the deconstruction of metaphysics? Santiago Zabala has proposed an original and fascinating answer to this question under the deeply postmodern motif of a hermeneutics of 'remnants'—thinking not Being but Being's remnants—that will repay study by everyone who is interested in the crucial line of radical hermeneutical work that stretches from Heidegger to Vattimo." — John D. Caputo, Syracuse University, coauthor of After the Death of God
"Although what remains of Being in the work of the thinkers Santiago Zabala explores—Schürmann, Derrida, Nancy, Gadamer, Tugendhat, and Vattimo—appears differently in each case, Zabala's work also demonstrates that what remains of Being, above all else, is its very questionability—and it is surely that which sustains the possibility of thinking. No mere exegesis, Zabala's work constitutes an important and original contribution to post-Heideggerian thought—it is a true continuation of the lines of thinking whose outlines and direction it also traces." — Jeff Malpas, author of Heidegger's Topology: Being, Place, World
"A stimulating new voice in the hermeneutic tradition of Heidegger, Gadamer, and Vattimo, Santiago Zabala follows his first book, The Hermeneutic Nature of Analytic Philosophy: A Study of Ernst Tugendhat, with this profound interpretation of the history of metaphysics. After offering a compelling reading of Heidegger's Destruktion of metaphysics as more properly a convalescence (Verwindung) than an agonistic overcoming (Überwindung) of Being, Zabala interprets the work of six post-Heideggerian thinkers as each engaging in his own specific way with what Zabala calls the remains of Being. This discussion leads to his own forceful arguments concerning the purpose and future of philosophy as one of keeping thought attuned to Being's constant regeneration, albeit always in the form of its remains." — William Egginton, Johns Hopkins University
"Santiago Zabala has produced an intensely postdeconstructive work, both reexamining and deepening the closure of metaphysics in the aftermath of Heidegger. His corroboration of the impossible but necessary injunction to pose the question of Being, which becomes ever more urgent and unavoidable after it has been thoroughly used up and depleted, is extraordinarily attuned to, at once, the history and the contemporary situation of ontology. Zabala uncovers nothing less than a vector of thinking that will carry philosophy well into the new century." — Michael Marder, author of The Event of the Thing