Buch, Englisch, Band 23, 206 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 454 g
Reihe: Social and Critical Theory
Beyond Marxism
Buch, Englisch, Band 23, 206 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 454 g
Reihe: Social and Critical Theory
ISBN: 978-90-04-39396-7
Verlag: Brill
The Budapest School: Beyond Marxism represents the first systematic and comprehensive study of the post-Marxist writings of the Budapest School to be published in English. The School itself has long been known in English-speaking circles for its neo-Marxist critique of the now-defunct Soviet system. The Budapest School: Beyond Marxism enriches this understanding by situating the confrontation with ‘actually existing socialism’ as but one moment, however formative, within a much richer and much more theoretically relevant philosophical itinerary. From the early critique of alienation through to the contemporary critical theories of modernity, The Budapest School: Beyond Marxism charts the evolution of the School’s thinking with a specific emphasis on the themes of culture, critique, history and the contingency of modern subjectivity.
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Acknowledgements IX
Introduction
Part 1: The Early Budapest School and the Critique of Alienation
1 ‘Back to Marx!’
1 Marxism and Philosophy
2 Work as the Species-Activity of Man
3 Freedom and Universality in History
4 Alienation and the Marxist Theory of Revolution
5 On the Phenomenology of Everyday Life
6 Individuality as the Unity of the Particular and the Universal
7 The Budapest School’s Marxist Humanism: Critical Reflections
8 Prague ’68 and the Search for a Critical Theory
Part 2: György Márkus: From the Critique of Production to The Philosophy of Culture
2 Márkus Contra Marx: Production, Economy and the Problem of Historical Teleology
1 Philosophical Debates in Post-War Critical Theory
2 The Paradigm of Production: A Conceptual Analysis
3 Reification and the Antinomies of Production
4 On the Utopian Character of Marxian Socialism
5 Culture and Enlightenment
3 Marxism, Modernity and The Dynamics of Culture
1 Marxism and Culture (I)—The Base/Superstructure Metaphor
2 Marxism and Culture (II)—The Theory and Practice of Ideology Critique
3 Towards a Pragmatics of Cultural Production
4 On the Autonomy of Culture
5 The Arts, Sciences, and the Paradoxical Unity of Modern Culture
6 The Dynamics of Cultural Modernity: Enlightenment and Romanticism
7 On the Aktualität of Márkus’ Post-Budapest Project
Part 3: Agnes Heller and Ferenc Fehér: Reflexive Stages in a Post-Marxist Radicalism
4 Towards a New Form of Historical Consciousness
1 The Confusion of Historical Consciousness
2 Philosophy of History as the Consciousness of Reflected Universality
3 The Antinomies of Universal History (I): Historicity and Universality
4 The Antinomies of Universal History (II): Freedom and Necessity
5 Marxism and History
6 Between Science and Critique
7 Reflected Generality as a Task, or, the Imperatives of Postmodernity
5 Multidimensional Modernity
1 Modernity, Socialism, and Democracy
2 Three Logics of Modernity? Some Critical Remarks
3 The Essence of Modernity (I): The Dynamics of Modernity
4 The Essence of Modernity (II): The Modern Social Arrangement
5 Excursus: Is Heller a Convergence Theorist?
6 Heller, Heidegger and the Modern Imagination
7 Conclusion: Modernity and Redemption
6 Contingency, Choice and Dissatisfaction
1 The Dissatisfied Society
2 Reflective Postmodernism: A Preliminary Account
3 ‘On the Railway Station’
4 Contingency as Infinite Possibility
5 From Contingency to Destiny
6 To Become What One Is: Heller on the Physiognomy of Existential Choice
7 Satisfaction Beyond the Choice of the Good
8 On the Meaning of Heller’s Postmodern Radicalism
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index