Abstract
In a radio broadcast from 1933, Martin Heidegger explains his decision to refuse a professorship at the University of Berlin by defending a philosophy that he says is rooted in the provinces. The broadcast - entitled Creative Landscape - sees Heidegger on the cusp of the turn in his thought from the existentialism of Being and Time (1927) to the poetic thinking of his work from the mid-1930s onwards. It is a fascinating yet neglected snapshot of his thought at a crucial historical moment, and also reveals some of the deeper problems raised by his philosophy - his rejection of epistemology, his anti-modernism, and the contradictions of fundamental ontology itself. The present paper argues that Heideggers refusal of the professorship reveals a deep antagonism between his philosophy of Being and the public sphere of the city, and highlights the weakness of Heideggers thinking when faced with some of the central problems of modernity. Key Words: alienation city Heidegger modernity provinces public sphere reification sociology Tönnies.