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LBI Year Book Essay Prize Winner 2020: Daniel Herskowitz

11 February 2020
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Congratulations to 

The Leo Baeck Institute London is pleased to announce that Daniel Herskowitz is the winner of the 2020 Leo Baeck Institute Year Book Essay Prize in German-Jewish Studies for his article Between Exclusion and Intersection: Heidegger’s Philosophy and Jewish Volkism, featured in the 2020 Leo Baeck Institute Year Book.

His article deals with some unexplored Jewish responses to the volkish elements in Martin Heidegger’s philosophy. Heidegger’s idiosyncratic and deeply philosophical account of volkism stood at the heart of his political support of National Socialism and of his exclusion of the Jews from the ontological task of thinking. This article demonstrates, however, that some of Heidegger’s Jewish readers identified with volkish moments in his philosophy and found these to be pertinent to their own condition as Jews in the modern world. This was made possible by the fact that, within the intellectual climate in which Heidegger’s thinking took shape, the volkish lexicon (Volk, Gemeinschaft, ‘fate’, ‘destiny’, and even ‘struggle’) was commonplace, indicated no clear association with any certain political view, and, indeed, was a central organ through which Jews made sense of their own existence and historical and political situation. Thus, while Heidegger’s volkism led to a philosophical marginalization of Jews, the multifariousness and widespread currency of volkish thinking brought some Jewish readers to recognize their shared conceptual horizon with Heidegger and to differentiate between Heidegger’s practical politics, which were anti-Jewish and loathsome, and his volkism, which was seen as fitting and useful for the Jewish case.

Daniel Herskowitz’s research interests include Modern and Medieval Jewish Thought, and Jewish-Christian relations. He is an intellectual historian and scholar of religion. He teaches and researches philosophy, Jewish thought, Jewish-Christian relations, nationalism and secularism. Before moving to Duke University, he was a research fellow and lecturer at the University of Oxford and Columbia University. He is the author of two books, “Heidegger and His Jewish Reception” (2021), winner of the Salo W. and Jeannette M. Baron Young Scholars Award, and “The Judeo‑Christian Thought of Franz Rosenzweig” (2025). He is the editor of “Hans Jonas: The Early Years” (2025) and “Studies on the Jewish Experience” (2022).

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