Abstract

Toward the end of his life Martin Heidegger made a rare journey abroad, boarding a cruise ship in Venice bound for Greece, where he hoped to find “that which an ancient memory has preserved for us and yet, through all the things that we think we know and we possess, remains distorted.”1 In this issue Paul Duro carefully details the particular anticipatory anxieties the philosopher experienced in matching the material plane to his auratic “ancient memory.” Patrick Lakey's photographs of Heidegger's Black Forest home complement Duro's essay.

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