Collected Works of J. G. Hamann
$18.00
All of the major works by the “Magus of the North”—perhaps the most savage critic of modernity in the history of ideas.
Also available in hardcover — click HERE
Description
Johann Georg Hamann, the “Magus of the North,” was one of the most penetrating critics of the Enlightenment. Friend and adversary of Kant, influence on Herder, Jacobi, Kierkegaard, and the Romantics, Hamann attacked the modern fantasy of autonomous reason at its root. For him, thought never begins from nowhere. Reason is always linguistic first, and dependent on tradition and inherited forms of life.
The Imperium Press edition brings together Hamann’s major works in a new English translation with extensive commentary: Socratic Memorabilia, Aesthetica in Nuce, the letter to Christian Jakob Kraus, the review of Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, Metacritique of the Purism of Reason, and Philological Ideas and Doubts. Together, these writings show the full range of Hamann’s assault on purified reason and Enlightenment universalism.
Hamann is difficult because he means to be. His prose moves through a dizzying array of styles and genres, with constant allusions—as the extensive introduction to this volume puts it: “human thought is replete with inherited materials, and so Hamann’s texts are also replete with inherited materials.” But beneath this density lies a remarkably consistent set of arguments that make Hamann perhaps the ultimate ally of illiberalism and tradition.
As the only widely available edition gathering all of Hamann’s major works, this volume offers an essential entry point into one of modernity’s most dangerous minds: a thinker who saw that civilization thinks first in names, images, and stories—and only afterwards pretends to reason from nothing.
Additional Information
| Publication Date | June 16, 2026 |
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| Weight | 0.25 kg |
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| Author(s) | J. G. Hamann |
| Language | English |
| Pages | 168 |
| ISBN | 978-1-923799-01-1 |
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