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Georg Lukács

 
Georg Lukács

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Georg Lukács



 
 
György Lukács (/?řr? luk?t?/) (April 13, 1885 – June 4, 1971) was a Hungarian
Hungary

Hungary , officially in English the Republic of Hungary , is a landlocked country in the Carpathian Basin of Central Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia....
 Marxist philosopher and literary critic. Most scholars consider him to be the founder of the tradition of Western Marxism
Western Marxism

Western Marxism is a term used to describe a wide variety of Marxist theory based in Western Europe and Central Europe , in contrast with philosophy in the Soviet Union....
. He contributed the ideas of reification
Reification (Marxism)

Reification is the consideration of an abstraction, relation or object as if it had human or living existence and abilities; at the same time it implies the thingification of social relations....
 and class consciousness
Class consciousness

Overview Class consciousness, literally, is consciousness of one's social class or economic rank in society. From the perspective of Marxist theory, it refers to the self-awareness or lack thereof, of a particular class, its capacity to act in its own rational interests, or a measure or assessment of the extent to which an individual o...
 to Marxist philosophy
Marxist philosophy

Marxist philosophy or Marxist theory are terms which cover work in philosophy which is strongly influenced by Karl Marx's materialism approach to theory or which is written by Marxists....
 and theory, and his literary criticism was influential in thinking about realism
Literary realism

Literary realism most often refers to the trend, beginning with certain works of French literature of the 19th century and extending to late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century authors in various countries, towards depictions of contemporary life and society 'as they were'....
 and about the novel
Novel

File:2009 stapelweise Neuerscheinungen im Buchladen.JPGA novel is today a long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern Romance and in the tradition of the novella....
 as a literary genre
Literary genre

A literary genre is a category of literary composition. Genres may be determined by literary technique, setting tone, content, or even length. Genre should not be confused with age category, by which literature may be classified as either adult, young-adult fiction, or children's literature....
. He served briefly as Hungary's Minister of Culture following the 1956 Hungarian Revolution
1956 Hungarian Revolution

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was a spontaneous nationwide revolt against the People's Republic of Hungary of Hungary and its Soviet Union-imposed policies, lasting from 23 October until 10 November 1956....
.

cs's full name, in German, was Georg Bernhard Lukács von Szegedin, and in Hungarian was Szegedi Lukács György Bernát; he published under the names Georg or György Lukács.






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György Lukács (/?řr? luk?t?/) (April 13, 1885 – June 4, 1971) was a Hungarian
Hungary

Hungary , officially in English the Republic of Hungary , is a landlocked country in the Carpathian Basin of Central Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia....
 Marxist philosopher and literary critic. Most scholars consider him to be the founder of the tradition of Western Marxism
Western Marxism

Western Marxism is a term used to describe a wide variety of Marxist theory based in Western Europe and Central Europe , in contrast with philosophy in the Soviet Union....
. He contributed the ideas of reification
Reification (Marxism)

Reification is the consideration of an abstraction, relation or object as if it had human or living existence and abilities; at the same time it implies the thingification of social relations....
 and class consciousness
Class consciousness

Overview Class consciousness, literally, is consciousness of one's social class or economic rank in society. From the perspective of Marxist theory, it refers to the self-awareness or lack thereof, of a particular class, its capacity to act in its own rational interests, or a measure or assessment of the extent to which an individual o...
 to Marxist philosophy
Marxist philosophy

Marxist philosophy or Marxist theory are terms which cover work in philosophy which is strongly influenced by Karl Marx's materialism approach to theory or which is written by Marxists....
 and theory, and his literary criticism was influential in thinking about realism
Literary realism

Literary realism most often refers to the trend, beginning with certain works of French literature of the 19th century and extending to late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century authors in various countries, towards depictions of contemporary life and society 'as they were'....
 and about the novel
Novel

File:2009 stapelweise Neuerscheinungen im Buchladen.JPGA novel is today a long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern Romance and in the tradition of the novella....
 as a literary genre
Literary genre

A literary genre is a category of literary composition. Genres may be determined by literary technique, setting tone, content, or even length. Genre should not be confused with age category, by which literature may be classified as either adult, young-adult fiction, or children's literature....
. He served briefly as Hungary's Minister of Culture following the 1956 Hungarian Revolution
1956 Hungarian Revolution

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was a spontaneous nationwide revolt against the People's Republic of Hungary of Hungary and its Soviet Union-imposed policies, lasting from 23 October until 10 November 1956....
.

Life and politics

Lukács's full name, in German, was Georg Bernhard Lukács von Szegedin, and in Hungarian was Szegedi Lukács György Bernát; he published under the names Georg or György Lukács. (Lukács is by most English speakers, the original pronunciation being .)

He was born Löwinger György Bernát to a wealthy Jewish family in Budapest
Budapest

Budapest is the Capitals of Hungary of Hungary. As the largest city of Hungary, it serves as the country's principal political, cultural, commerce, Industry, and transportation center and is considered an important hub in Central Europe....
. His father was József Löwinger (Szegedi Lukács József, b. Szeged
Szeged

Szeged , , is the fourth largest city of Hungary, the regional centre of South-Eastern Hungary and the county seat of the county of Csongr?d ....
) (1855–1928), an investment banker, his mother was Adele Wertheimer (Wertheimer Adél, b. Budapest
Budapest

Budapest is the Capitals of Hungary of Hungary. As the largest city of Hungary, it serves as the country's principal political, cultural, commerce, Industry, and transportation center and is considered an important hub in Central Europe....
) (1860–1917). Lukács studied at the universities of Budapest and Berlin, receiving his Ph.D. in 1906.

Pre-Marxist period

While attending grammar school and university in Budapest, Lukács's membership of various socialist circles brought him into contact with the anarcho-syndicalist Ervin Szabó, who in turn introduced him to the works of Georges Sorel
Georges Sorel

Georges Eug?ne Sorel was a French philosopher and theorist of revolutionary syndicalism....
. Lukács's outlook during this period was modernist and anti-positivist
Antipositivism

Antipositivism is the view in sociology that social sciences need to create and use different scientific methods than those used in the field of natural sciences....
. From 1904 to 1908, he was involved in a theatrical group that produced plays by dramatists such as Henrik Ibsen
Henrik Ibsen

Henrik Johan Ibsen was a major Nineteenth-century theatre Norway playwright of realism drama and poet. He is often referred to as the "father of modern drama" and is one of the founders of modernism in the theatre....
, August Strindberg and Gerhart Hauptmann
Gerhart Hauptmann

Gerhart Hauptmann was a Germany dramatist who received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1912....
.

Lukács spent much time in Germany: he studied in Berlin in 1906 and again in 1909-10, where he made the acquaintance of Georg Simmel
Georg Simmel

Georg Simmel was one of the first generation of Germany sociology. His studies pioneered the concept of social structure, and he was a key precursor of social network analysis....
, and in Heidelberg in 1913, where he became friends with Max Weber
Max Weber

Maximilian Carl Emil Weber was one of the most profoundly influential thinkers of the twentieth century. Born in Germany, Weber became a lawyer, politician, scholar, political economy, and sociology....
, Ernst Bloch
Ernst Bloch

Ernst Simon Bloch was a Germany Marxism Philosophy.Bloch was influenced by both Hegel and Marx. He was also interested in music and art . He established friendships with Georg Lukacs, Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill and Theodor W....
 and Stefan George
Stefan George

Stefan Anton George was a Germany poet, editing, and translator....
. The idealist system Lukács subscribed to at the time was indebted to the Kantianism
Kantianism

Kantianism is the philosophy of Immanuel Kant, a Germany philosopher born in K?nigsberg, Germany . The term Kantianism or Kantian is sometimes also used to describe contemporary positions in philosophy of mind, epistemology, and ethics....
 that dominated in German universities, but also to Plato
Plato

Plato , was a Classical Greece Greeks philosopher, mathematician, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the Platonic Academy in Ancient Athens, the first institution of higher learning in the western world....
, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Dilthey
Dilthey

Dilthey is a surname:*Karl Dilthey*Wilhelm Dilthey...
 and Dostoyevsky. His works Soul and Form and The Theory of the Novel were published in 1910 and 1916 respectively.

Lukács returned to Budapest in 1915 and led an intellectual circle, the Sunday Circle, or the Lukács Circle, as it was called, which was preoccupied above all with cultural themes arising out of a shared interest in the writings of Dostoyevsky, along the lines of Lukács' interests in his last Heidelberg years, and which sponsored events that gained the participation of such eventually famous figures as Karl Mannheim
Karl Mannheim

Karl Mannheim , or Mannheim K?roly in the original writing of his name, was a Jewish Hungarian-born sociology, influential in the first half of the 20th century and one of the founding fathers of classical sociology....
, Béla Bartók
Béla Bartók

B?la Viktor J?nos Bart?k was a Hungarian people composer and pianist, considered to be one of the greatest composers of the 20th century. Through his collection and analytical study of folk music, he was one of the founders of ethnomusicology....
, Béla Balázs
Béla Balázs

B?la Bal?zs , born Herbert Bauer, was a Hungary-Jewish film criticism, aesthetics, writer and poet.He was the son of German-born parents, adopting his nom de plume in newspaper articles written before his 1902 move to Budapest, where he studied Hungarian and German at the E?tv?s Collegium....
 and Karl Polanyi
Karl Polanyi

Karl Paul Polanyi was a Hungary intellectual known for his opposition to traditional Economics thought and his influential book The Great Transformation....
 amongst others, some of whom also took part in its weekly meetings. In the last year of the war, the participants divided in their political loyalties, although several of the leaders joined Lukács in his abrupt shift to the Communist Party.

Communist leader

In light of the First World War and the Russian Revolution of 1917
Russian Revolution of 1917

The Russian Revolution is the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union....
, Lukács rethought his ideas. He became a committed Marxist in this period and joined the fledgling Communist Party of Hungary in 1918. As part of the government of the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic
Hungarian Soviet Republic

The Hungarian Soviet Republic or Soviet Republic of Hungary was a Communism regime established in Hungary from March 21 until August 6, 1919, under the leadership of B?la Kun....
, Lukács was made People's Commissar for Education and Culture (he was deputy to the Commissar for Education Zsigmond Kunfi).

During the period of the Hungarian Soviet Republic
Hungarian Soviet Republic

The Hungarian Soviet Republic or Soviet Republic of Hungary was a Communism regime established in Hungary from March 21 until August 6, 1919, under the leadership of B?la Kun....
 Lukács was a major party worker and a political commissar of the Fifth Division of the Hungarian Red Army. In this capacity he ordered the execution of eight persons in Poroszlo in May 1919, after his division was worsted.

After the Soviet Republic was defeated, Lukács fled from Hungary to Vienna. He was arrested but was saved from extradition thanks to the efforts of a group of writers which included Thomas
Thomas Mann

Paul Thomas Mann was a German literature, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and 1929 Nobel Prize for Literature, known for his series of highly symbolic and irony epic novels and novellas, noted for their insight into the psychology of the artist and the intellectual....
 and Heinrich Mann
Heinrich Mann

Luiz Heinrich Mann was a Germany novelist who wrote works with social themes whose attacks on the authoritarian and increasingly militaristic nature of post-Weimar German society led to his exile in 1933....
, the former of whom would later base the character Naphta on Lukács in his novel The Magic Mountain
The Magic Mountain

The Magic Mountain is a novel by Thomas Mann, first published in November 1924. It is widely considered to be one of the most influential works of 20th century German literature....
. During his time in Vienna in the 1920s, Lukacs befriended other Left Communists who were working or in exile there, including Victor Serge
Victor Serge

Victor Lvovich Kibalchich better known as Victor Serge, was a Russian revolutionary and Francophone writer. Originally an anarchist, he joined the Bolsheviks five months after arriving in Petrograd in January 1919, and later worked for the newly founded Comintern as a journalist, editor and translator....
, Adolf Joffe and Antonio Gramsci
Antonio Gramsci

Antonio Gramsci was an Italian philosopher, writer, politician and political theorist. A founding member and onetime leader of the Communist Party of Italy, he was imprisoned by Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime....
.

Lukács turned his attentions to developing Leninist
Leninism

Leninism refers to various related Political science and economics theories elaborated by the Bolshevik Communism leader Vladimir Lenin. Leninism builds upon and elaborates the ideas of Marxism, and serves as a philosophical basis for the ideology of Soviet communism....
 ideas in the field of philosophy. His major works in this period were the essays collected in his magnum opus "History and Class Consciousness", first published in 1923. Although these essays display signs of what Lenin referred to as "ultra-leftism", they arguably carry through his effort of providing Leninism with a better philosophical basis than did Lenin himself. Along with the work of Karl Korsch
Karl Korsch

Karl Korsch was a German Marxist theorist....
, the book was attacked at the Fifth Comintern Congress in July 1924 by Grigory Zinoviev
Grigory Zinoviev

Gregory Yevseevich Zinoviev...
. In 1924, shortly after Lenin's death, Lukács also published the short study Lenin: A Study in the Unity of His Thought. In 1925, he published a critical review of Nikolai Bukharin
Nikolai Bukharin

Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin , was a Bolshevik Russian Revolution of 1917 and intelligentsia and Soviet Union politician....
's manual of historical materialism
Historical materialism

Historical materialism is a methodological approach to the study of society, economics, and history, first articulated by Karl Marx . Marx himself never used the term but referred to his approach as "the materialist conception of history."...
.

As a Hungarian exile, he remained active on the left wing of Hungarian Communist Party, and was opposed to the Moscow-backed programme of Béla Kun
Béla Kun

B?la Kun , born B?la Kohn, was a Hungarian Communist politician who ruled Hungary as leader of the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic in 1919....
. His 'Blum theses' of 1928 called for the overthrow of the Fascist regime of Admiral Horthy by means of a strategy similar to the Popular Front
Popular front

A popular front is a broad coalition of different political groupings, often made up of Left-wing politics and Centrism who are united by opposition to another group ....
s of the 1930s. He advocated a 'democratic dictatorship' of the proletariat
Proletariat

The proletariat is a term used to identify a lower social class; a member of such a class is proletarian. Originally it was identified as those people who had no wealth other than their sons....
 and peasantry as a transitional stage leading to the dictatorship of the proletariat
Dictatorship of the proletariat

The "dictatorship of the proletariat" or workers' state is a term employed by Marxists that refers to what they see as a temporary state between the capitalism society and the classless, stateless and moneyless Communism society....
. Lukács's strategy was condemned by the Comintern
Comintern

The 'Comintern' was an international Communism organization founded in Moscow in March 1919. The International intended to fight "by all available means, including armed force, for the overthrow of the international bourgeoisie and for the creation of an international Soviet republic as a transition stage to the complete abolition of the Sta...
 and thereafter he retreated from active politics into theoretical work.

Questions of moral culpability under Rákosism / Stalinism

Lukács lived in Berlin from 1929-1933, but moved to Moscow
Moscow

Moscow is the capital and the largest types of inhabited localities in Russia of the Russian Federation. It is also the largest European cities and metropolitan areas, with the Moscow metropolitan area ranking among the largest urban areas in the world....
 following the rise of Nazism
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
, remaining there until the end of the Second World War. Ironically, though many pro-Stalin foreign communists including his Hungarian colleague Kun were killed during the Great Purges of the late 1930s, Lukács survived.

After the war Lukács was involved in the establishment of the new Hungarian government as a member of the Hungarian Communist Party
Hungarian Communist Party

The Communist Party of Hungary , renamed Hungarian Communist Party in 1945, was founded on November 24, 1918, and was in power in Hungary briefly from March to August 1919 under B?la Kun and the Hungarian Soviet Republic....
. From 1945 Lukács was a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Hungarian Academy of Sciences

The Hungarian Academy of Sciences is the most important learned society of Hungary. Its seat is at the bank of the Danube in Budapest.The history of the academy began in 1825, when Count Istv?n Sz?chenyi offered one year's income of his estate for the purposes of a Learned Society at a district session of the Diet in Bratislava , a...
. Between 1945 and 1946 he explosively criticised non-communist philosophers and writers. Lukács has been accused of playing an "administrative" (legal-bureaucratic) role in the removal of independent and non-communist intellectuals like Béla Hamvas
Béla Hamvas

B?la Hamvas was a Hungary writer, philosopher, and social critic. He was the first thinker to introduce the Traditionalist School of Ren? Gu?non to Hungary....
, István Bibó and Lajos Prohászka, Károly Kerényi from Hungarian academic life. Non-communist intellectuals like Bibó were often imprisoned, forced into menial and low waged mental labour (like translation work) or forced into manual labour during the 1946–1953 period. According to Claudio Mutti, he was the member of the party commission responsible for making lists of "anti-democratic" (anti-party or anti-communist) and socially "aberrant" (moral or ethical statements outside of the official ethics of the communist party) books and works. The lists of banned works (in three parts totalling 160 pages) were distributed by the Information and Press Department of the Prime Ministers office, and included also many foreign writers, especially right-wing authors such as D'Annunzio or Schmitt.

Lukács' personal aesthetic and political position on culture was always that Socialist culture would eventually triumph in terms of quality, but that this conflict would be fought as one of competing cultures, not by "administrative" measures. In 1948–49 Lukács' position for cultural tolerance within the party and intellectual life was smashed in a "Lukács purge" when Mátyás Rákosi
Mátyás Rákosi

M?ty?s R?kosi as M?ty?s Rosenfeld - died February 5, 1971 was a Hungary communism politician, of Jewish origin and born in present-day Serbia....
 turned his famous salami tactics
Salami tactics

Salami tactics, also known as the salami-slice strategy, is a Divide and rule process of threats and alliances used to overcome opposition....
 on the Hungarian Communist Party itself. Lukács was reintegrated into party life in the mid 1950s, and was used by the party during the purges of the writers association in 1955-56 (See Aczel, Meray Revolt of the Mind). However, Aczel and Meray both believe that Lukács was only present at the purge begrudgingly, and cite Lukács leaving the presidium and the meeting at the first break as evidence of this reluctance.

De-Stalinisation

In 1956 Lukács became a minister of the brief communist revolutionary government led by Imre Nagy
Imre Nagy

Imre Nagy was a Hungary politician, appointed Prime Minister of Hungary on two occasions. Nagy's second term ended when his non-Soviet Union government was brought down by Soviet invasion in the failed Hungarian Revolution of 1956, resulting in Nagy's execution on charges of treason two years later....
 which opposed the Soviet Union. At this time Lukács' daughter led a short-lived party of communist revolutionary youth. Lukács' position on the 1956 revolution was that the Hungarian Communist Party would need to retreat into a coalition government of socialists, and slowly rebuild its credibility with the Hungarian people. As such, while a minister in Imre Nagy's revolutionary government, Lukács also participated in the refoundation of the Hungarian Communist Party on a new basis. This party was rapidly coopted by János Kádár
János Kádár

J?nos K?d?r, n? Giovanni Czermanik , was a Hungarian politician, the communist leader of Hungary from 1956 to 1988, and twice served as Prime Minister of Hungary, from 1956 to 1958 and again from 1961 to 1965....
 after 4 November 1956.(Woroszylski, 1957).

During the 1956 Hungarian Revolution
1956 Hungarian Revolution

The Hungarian Revolution of 1956 was a spontaneous nationwide revolt against the People's Republic of Hungary of Hungary and its Soviet Union-imposed policies, lasting from 23 October until 10 November 1956....
 Lukács was present at debates of the anti-party and revolutionary communist Petofi society, while remaining part of the party apparatus. During the revolution itself, as mentioned in "Budapest Diary," Lukács argued for a new Soviet aligned communist party. In Lukács' view the new party could only win social leadership by persuasion instead of force. Lukács envisioned an alliance between the dissident communist Party of Youth, the revolutionary Hungarian Social Democratic Party
Hungarian Social Democratic Party

The Hungarian Social Democratic Party is a political party in Hungary. The MSZDP is the oldest political party still functioning in Hungary. It was founded in a congress in December 1890....
 and Lukács' own Soviet aligned party as a very junior partner. After 1956 Lukács narrowly avoided execution, and was not trusted by the party apparatus due to his role in the revolutionary Nagy government. Lukács' followers were indicted for political crimes throughout the 1960s and 70s, and a number fled to the West. Lukács' books The Young Hegel and The Destruction of Reason have been used to argue that Lukács was covertly critical of Stalinism as an irrational distortion of Hegelian-Marxism .

Following the defeat of the Revolution, Lukács was deported to Romania with the rest of Nagy's government but unlike Nagy, he survived the purges of 1956. He returned to Budapest in 1957. Lukács publicly abandoned his positions of 1956 and engaged in self-criticism. Having abandoned his earlier positions, Lukács was to remain loyal to the Communist Party until his death in 1971. Lukács became more publicly critical of the Soviet Union and Hungarian Communist Party in his last years following the uprisings in France
France

France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
 and Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovakia

Czechoslovakia was a sovereign state in Central Europe that existed from October 1918 until 1992 . On January 1, 1993, Czechoslovakia dissolution of Czechoslovakia into the Czech Republic and Slovakia....
 in 1968.

In an interview undertaken just before his death Lukács remarked: "Without a genuine general theory of society and its movement, one does not get away from Stalinism. Stalin was a great tactician...But Stalin, unfortunately, was not a Marxist...The essence of Stalinism lies in placing tactics before strategy, practice above theory...The bureaucracy generated by Stalinism is a tremendous evil. Society is suffocated by it. Everything becomes unreal, nominalistic. People see no design, no strategic aim, and do not move...". Thus Lukács concludes "[w]e must learn to connect the great decisions of popular political power with personal needs, those of individuals." (Marcus & Zoltan 1989: 215-16)

Work


History and Class Consciousness


Written between 1919 and 1922 and first published in 1923, History and Class Consciousness
History and Class Consciousness

Georg Luk?cs' History and Class Consciousness Class consciousness, as described by Georg Luk?cs's famous History and Class Consciousness , is opposed to any psychology conception of consciousness, which forms the basis of individual or mass psychology ....
 initiated the current of thought that came to be known as Western Marxism
Western Marxism

Western Marxism is a term used to describe a wide variety of Marxist theory based in Western Europe and Central Europe , in contrast with philosophy in the Soviet Union....
. The book is notable for contributing to debates concerning Marxism
Marxism

Marxism is the political philosophy and practice derived from the work of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Marxism holds at its core a Marxist analysis of Critique of capitalism and a theory of social change....
 and its relation to sociology
Sociology

Sociology is a branch of the social sciences that uses systematic methods of Empiricism and critical theory to develop and refine a body of knowledge about human social structure and activity, sometimes with the goal of applying such knowledge to the pursuit of social welfare....
, politics
Politics

Politics is the process by which groups of people make decisions. The term is generally applied to behaviour within civil governments, but politics has been observed in all human group interactions, including corporation, academia, and religion institutions....
 and philosophy
Philosophy

Philosophy is the study of general problems concerning matters such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty, justice, validity, mind, and language....
, and for reconstructing many elements of Marx's theory of alienation
Marx's theory of alienation

Marx's theory of alienation , as expressed in the writings of the young Marx , refers to the separation of things that naturally belong together, or to put antagonism between things that are properly in harmony....
 before most of the works of the Young Marx
Young Marx

Young Marx is one half of the concept in Marxology that Karl Marx's intellectual development can be broken into two broad categories, the other being ?Mature Marx?....
, in which it is expounded, had been published. Lukács's work elaborates and expands upon Marxist theories such as ideology
Ideology

An ideology is a set of aims and ideas, especially in politics. An ideology can be thought of as a comprehensive vision, as a way of looking at things , as in common sense and several philosophical tendencies , or a set of ideas proposed by the dominant class of a society to all members of this society....
, false consciousness
False consciousness

|}False consciousness is the Marxist thesis that material and institutional processes in capitalism society are misleading to the proletariat, and to other classes....
, reification
Reification (Marxism)

Reification is the consideration of an abstraction, relation or object as if it had human or living existence and abilities; at the same time it implies the thingification of social relations....
 and class consciousness
Class consciousness

Overview Class consciousness, literally, is consciousness of one's social class or economic rank in society. From the perspective of Marxist theory, it refers to the self-awareness or lack thereof, of a particular class, its capacity to act in its own rational interests, or a measure or assessment of the extent to which an individual o...
.

In the first chapter, "", Lukács defined orthodoxy as the fidelity to the "Marxist method", and not to the "dogmas":
"Orthodox Marxism, therefore, does not imply the uncritical acceptance of the results of Marx’s investigations. It is not the ‘belief’ in this or that thesis, nor the exegesis of a ‘sacred’ book. On the contrary, orthodoxy refers exclusively to method. It is the scientific conviction that dialectical materialism is the road to truth and that its methods can be developed, expanded and deepened only along the lines laid down by its founders." (§1)


He criticized revisionist attempts by calling to the return to this Marxist method, which is fundamentally dialectical materialism
Dialectical materialism

Dialectical materialism is the philosophy of Karl Marx, which he formulated by taking the dialectic of Hegel and joining it to the Materialism of Feuerbach....
. In much the same way that Althusser
Louis Althusser

Louis Pierre Althusser was a Marxist philosophy. He was born in Algeria and studied at the ?cole Normale Sup?rieure in Paris, where he eventually became Professor of Philosophy....
 would later define Marxism and psychoanalysis
Psychoanalysis

Psychoanalysis is a body of ideas developed by Austrian physician Sigmund Freud and his followers, which is devoted to the study of human psychological functioning and behaviour....
 as "conflictual sciences", Lukács conceives "revisionism" as inherent to the Marxist theory, insofar as dialectical materialism is, according to him, the product of class struggle:
"For this reason the task of orthodox Marxism, its victory over Revisionism and utopianism
Utopian socialism

Utopian socialism is a term used to define the first currents of modern Socialism thought. Although it is technically possible for any person living at any time in history to be a utopian socialist, the term is most often applied to those utopian socialists who lived in the first quarter of the 19th century....
 can never mean the defeat, once and for all, of false tendencies. It is an ever-renewed struggle against the insidious effects of bourgeois ideology on the thought of the proletariat. Marxist orthodoxy is no guardian of traditions, it is the eternally vigilant prophet proclaiming the relation between the tasks of the immediate present and the totality of the historical process." (end of §5)


According to him, "The premise of dialectical materialism is, we recall: 'It is not men’s consciousness that determines their existence, but on the contrary, their social existence that determines their consciousness.'... Only when the core of existence stands revealed as a social process can existence be seen as the product, albeit the hitherto unconscious product, of human activity." (§5). In line with Marx's thought, he thus criticized the individualist bourgeois philosophy of the subject
Subject (philosophy)

In philosophy, a subject is a being which has subjective experiences, subjective consciousness or a relationship with another entity . A subject is an observer and an object is a thing observed....
, which founds itself on the voluntary and conscious subject. Against this ideology
Ideology

An ideology is a set of aims and ideas, especially in politics. An ideology can be thought of as a comprehensive vision, as a way of looking at things , as in common sense and several philosophical tendencies , or a set of ideas proposed by the dominant class of a society to all members of this society....
, he asserts the primacy of social relations. Existence — and thus the world — is the product of human activity; but this can be seen only if the primacy of social process on individual consciousness, which is but the effect of ideological mystification, is accepted. This doesn't entail that Lukács restrain human liberty
Liberty

Liberty, the freedom to act or believe without being stopped by unnecessary force, is generally considered in modern time to be a concept of political philosophy and identifies the condition in which an individual has the right to act according to his or her own free will....
 on behalf of some kind of sociological determinism
Determinism

Determinism is the philosophy proposition that every event, including human cognition and behavior, decision and action, is causality determined by an unbroken chain of prior occurrences. With numerous historical debates, many varieties and philosophical positions on the subject of determinism exist from traditions throughout...
: to the contrary, this production of existence is the possibility of praxis.

Henceforth, the problem consists in the relationship between theory and practice. Lukács quotes Marx's words: "It is not enough that thought should seek to realise itself; reality must also strive towards thought." How does the thought of intellectual
Intellectual

An intellectual is a person who uses his or her intelligence and Critical thinking, either in their profession or for the benefit of personal pursuits....
s be related to class struggle, if theory is not simply to lag behind history, as it is in Hegel's philosophy of history ("Minerva always comes at the dusk of night...")? Lukács criticizes Engels' Anti-Dühring
Anti-Dühring

Herrn Eugen D?hrings Umw?lzung der Wissenschaft, commonly known as Anti-D?hring, is a book written in German by Friedrich Engels, published in 1878....
, charging that he "does not even mention the most vital interaction, namely the dialectical relation between subject and object in the historical process, let alone give it the prominence it deserves." This dialectical relation between subject and object gives the basis for Lukács' critique of Kant
KANT

KANT is a computer algebra system for mathematicians interested in algebraic number theory, performing sophisticated computations in algebraic number fields, in Global field function fields, and in local fields....
's epistemology
Epistemology

Epistemology or theory of knowledge is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge. It addresses the questions:...
, according to which the subject is the exterior, universal and contemplating subject, separated from the object.

For Lukács, "ideology" is really a projection of the class consciousness of the bourgeoisie
Bourgeoisie

Bourgeoisie is a classification used in analyzing human societies to describe a social class of people. Historically, the bourgeoisie comes from the middle or merchant classes of the Middle Ages, whose status or power came from employment, education, and wealth, as distinguished from those whose power came from being born into an aristocrati...
, which functions to prevent the proletariat
Proletariat

The proletariat is a term used to identify a lower social class; a member of such a class is proletarian. Originally it was identified as those people who had no wealth other than their sons....
 from attaining a real consciousness of its revolutionary position. Ideology determines the "form of objectivity
Objectivity (philosophy)

For other uses of "objectivity", see Objectivity Objectivity is both an important and very difficult concept to pin down in philosophy. While there is no universally accepted articulation of objectivity, a proposition is generally considered to be objectively true when its truth conditions are "mind-independent"—that is, not the r...
", thus the structure of knowledge itself. Real science must attain, according to Lukács, the "concrete totality" through which only it is possible to think the current form of objectivity as a historical period. Thus, the so-called eternal "laws" of economics are dismissed as the ideological illusion projected by the current form of objectivity ("What is Orthodoxical Marxism?", §3). He also writes: "It is only when the core of being
Being

In ontology being is anything that can be said to be, either Transcendence or Immanence.The nature of being varies by philosophy, given different interpretations in the frameworks of Parmenides, Leucippus, Plato, Aristotle, Plotinus, Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Hegel, Heidegger, and Sartre....
 has showed itself as social becoming, that the being itself can appear as a product, so far unconscious, of human activity, and this activity, in turn, as the decisive element of the transformation of being." ("What is Orthodoxical Marxism?",§5) Finally, "orthodoxical marxism" is not defined as interpretation of Capital as if it were the Bible or as embracement of certain "marxist thesis", but as fidelity to the "marxist method", dialectics.

Lukács presents the category of reification
Reification (Marxism)

Reification is the consideration of an abstraction, relation or object as if it had human or living existence and abilities; at the same time it implies the thingification of social relations....
 whereby, due to the commodity
Commodity

A commodity is anything for which there is demand, but which is supplied without qualitative product differentiation across a market. It is a product that is the same no matter who produces it, such as petroleum, notebook paper, or milk....
 nature of capitalist society, social relations become objectified, precluding the ability for a spontaneous emergence of class consciousness. It is in this context that the need for a party in the Leninist sense emerges, the subjective aspect of the re-invigorated Marxian dialectic
Dialectical materialism

Dialectical materialism is the philosophy of Karl Marx, which he formulated by taking the dialectic of Hegel and joining it to the Materialism of Feuerbach....
.

In his later career, Lukács repudiated the ideas of History and Class Consciousness, in particular the belief in the proletariat as a subject
Subject (philosophy)

In philosophy, a subject is a being which has subjective experiences, subjective consciousness or a relationship with another entity . A subject is an observer and an object is a thing observed....
-object
Object (philosophy)

In philosophy, an object is a thing, an entity, or a being. This may be taken in several senses.In its weakest sense, the word object is the most all-purpose of nouns, and can replace a noun in any sentence at all....
 of history" (1960 Postface to French translation), but he wrote a defence of them as late as 1925 or 1926. This unfinished manuscript, which he called Tailism and the Dialectic, was only published in Hungarian
Hungarian language

Hungarian is a Uralic languages unrelated to most other languages in Europe. It is mainly spoken in Hungary and by the Hungarian minorities in the seven neighbouring countries....
 in 1996 and English in 2000 under the title A Defence of History and Class Consciousness. It is perhaps the most important "unknown" Marxist text of the twentieth century.

Literary and aesthetic work

In addition to his standing as a Marxist political thinker, Lukács was an influential literary critic of the twentieth century. His important work in literary criticism began early in his career, with The Theory of the Novel, a seminal work in literary theory
Literary theory

Literary theory in a strict sense is the systematic study of the nature of literature and of the methods for analyzing literature. However, literary scholarship since the 19th century often includes?in addition to, or even instead of literary theory in the strict sense?considerations of intellectual history, moral philosophy, social prophecy,...
 and the theory of genre
Genre

A genre is a loose set of criteria for a category of composition; the term is often used to categorize literature and speech, but is also used for any other Art#Art forms or utterance....
. The book is a history of the novel
Novel

File:2009 stapelweise Neuerscheinungen im Buchladen.JPGA novel is today a long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern Romance and in the tradition of the novella....
 as a form, and an investigation into its distinct characteristics.

Lukács later repudiated The Theory of the Novel, writing a lengthy introduction that described it as erroneous, but nonetheless containing a "romantic anti-capitalism" which would later develop into Marxism. (This introduction also contains his famous dismissal of Theodor Adorno and others in Western Marxism as having taken up residence in the "Grand Hotel Abyss".)

Lukács's later literary criticism includes the well-known essay "Kafka or Thomas Mann?", in which Lukács argues for the work of Thomas Mann
Thomas Mann

Paul Thomas Mann was a German literature, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and 1929 Nobel Prize for Literature, known for his series of highly symbolic and irony epic novels and novellas, noted for their insight into the psychology of the artist and the intellectual....
 as a superior attempt to deal with the condition of modernity
Modernity

Modernity is a term that refers to the modern era. It is distinct from modernism, and, in different contexts, refers to cultural and intellectual movements of the period c....
, while he criticizes Franz Kafka
Franz Kafka

Franz Kafka was one of the major fiction writers of the 20th century. He was born to a middle-class German language-speaking Jewish family in Prague, Austria-Hungary, presently the Czech Republic....
's brand of modernism
Modernism

Modernism, in its broadest definition, is modern thought, character, or practice. More specifically, the term describes both a set of cultural tendencies and an array of associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century....
. Lukács was steadfastly opposed to the formal innovations of modernist writers like Kafka, James Joyce
James Joyce

James Augustine Aloysius Joyce was an Ireland expatriate author of the 20th century. He is best known for his landmark novel Ulysses and its controversial successor Finnegans Wake , as well as the short story collection Dubliners and the semi-autobiographical novel A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man ....
, and Samuel Beckett
Samuel Beckett

Samuel Barclay Beckett was an Irish people writer, dramatist and poet. Beckett's work offers a bleak outlook on human culture and both formally and philosophically became increasingly minimalism....
, preferring the traditional aesthetic of realism. He famously argued for the revolutionary character of the novels of Sir Walter Scott and Honoré de Balzac
Honoré de Balzac

Honor? de Balzac was a French novelist and playwright. His magnum opus was a Novel sequence of almost 100 novels and plays collectively entitled La Com?die humaine, which presents a panorama of French life in the years after the fall of Napol?on Bonaparte in 1815....
. Lukács felt that both authors' nostalgic, pro-aristocratic politics allowed them accurate and critical stances because of their opposition to the rising bourgeoisie
Bourgeoisie

Bourgeoisie is a classification used in analyzing human societies to describe a social class of people. Historically, the bourgeoisie comes from the middle or merchant classes of the Middle Ages, whose status or power came from employment, education, and wealth, as distinguished from those whose power came from being born into an aristocrati...
 (albeit reactionary opposition). This view was expressed in his later book The Historical Novel, as well as in his 1938 essay Realism in the Balance
Realism in the Balance

Realism in the Balance is a 1938 essay by Georg Luk?cs in which he defends the "traditional" Literary realism of authors like Thomas Mann in the face of rising Modernist movements, such as Expressionism, Surrealism, and Naturalism_%28literature%29....
.

“Realism in the Balance” (1938)—Lukács’ defense of literary realism


The initial intent of “Realism in the Balance”, stated at its outset, is debunking the claims of those defending Expressionism
Expressionism

Expressionism is the tendency of an artist to distort reality for an emotional effect; it is a subjective art form. Expressionism is exhibited in many art forms, including painting, literature, theatre, film, Expressionist architecture and Expressionism ....
 as a valuable literary movement. Lukacs addresses the discordance in the community of modernist critics, whom he regarded as incapable of deciding which writers were Expressionist and which were not, arguing that “perhaps there is no such thing as an Expressionist writer.”

But although his aim is ostensibly to criticize what he perceived as the over-valuation of modernist schools of writing at the time the article was published, Lukacs uses the essay as an opportunity to advance his formulation of the desirable alternative to these schools. He rejects the notion that modern art must necessarily manifest itself as a litany of sequential movements, beginning with Naturalism, and proceeding through Impressionism
Impressionism

Impressionism was a 19th-century art movement that began as a loose association of Paris-based artists art exhibition their art publicly in the 1860s....
 and Expressionism
Expressionism

Expressionism is the tendency of an artist to distort reality for an emotional effect; it is a subjective art form. Expressionism is exhibited in many art forms, including painting, literature, theatre, film, Expressionist architecture and Expressionism ....
 to culminate in Surrealism
Surrealism

Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early-1920s, and is best known for the visual artworks and writings of the group members....
. For Lukacs, the important issue at stake was not the conflict that results from the modernists’ evolving oppositions to classical forms, but rather the ability of art to confront an objective reality that exists in the world, an ability he found almost entirely lacking in modernism
Modernism

Modernism, in its broadest definition, is modern thought, character, or practice. More specifically, the term describes both a set of cultural tendencies and an array of associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western culture in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century....
.

Lukacs believed that desirable alternative to such modernism must therefore take the form of Realism, and he enlists the realist authors Maxim Gorky
Maxim Gorky

Aleksey Maksimovich Peshkov , better known as Maxim Gorky , was a Russian/Soviet Union author, a founder of the socialist realism literary method and a political activist....
, Thomas and Heinrich Mann
Heinrich Mann

Luiz Heinrich Mann was a Germany novelist who wrote works with social themes whose attacks on the authoritarian and increasingly militaristic nature of post-Weimar German society led to his exile in 1933....
, and Romain Rolland
Romain Rolland

Romain Rolland was a France dramatist, essayist, art historian, mystic and pacifist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1915....
 to champion his cause. To frame the debate, Lukacs introduces the arguments of critic Ernst Bloch
Ernst Bloch

Ernst Simon Bloch was a Germany Marxism Philosophy.Bloch was influenced by both Hegel and Marx. He was also interested in music and art . He established friendships with Georg Lukacs, Bertolt Brecht, Kurt Weill and Theodor W....
, a defender of Expressionism
Expressionism

Expressionism is the tendency of an artist to distort reality for an emotional effect; it is a subjective art form. Expressionism is exhibited in many art forms, including painting, literature, theatre, film, Expressionist architecture and Expressionism ....
, and the author to whom Lukacs was chiefly responding. He maintains that modernists such as Bloch are too willing to ignore the realist tradition, an ignorance that he believes derives from a modernist rejection of a crucial tenet of Marxist theory, a rejection which he quotes Bloch as propounding. This tenet is the belief that the system of capitalism is “an objective totality of social relations,” and it is fundamental to Lukacs’ arguments in favor of realism.

He explains that the pervasiveness of capitalism
Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are private property and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled....
, the unity in its economic and ideological theory, and its profound influence on social relations comprise a “closed integration” or “totality,” an objective whole that functions independent of human consciousness. Lukacs cites Marx to bolster this historical materialist worldview: “The relations of production in every society form a whole.” He further relies on Marx to argue that the bourgeoisie
Bourgeoisie

Bourgeoisie is a classification used in analyzing human societies to describe a social class of people. Historically, the bourgeoisie comes from the middle or merchant classes of the Middle Ages, whose status or power came from employment, education, and wealth, as distinguished from those whose power came from being born into an aristocrati...
’s unabated development of the world’s markets are so far-reaching as to create a unified totality, and explains that because the increasing autonomy of elements of the capitalist system (such as the autonomy of currency) is perceived by society as “crisis,” there must be an underlying unity that binds these seemingly autonomous elements of the capitalist system together, and makes their separation appear as crisis. Returning to modernist forms, Lukacs stipulates that such theories disregard the relationship of literature to objective reality, in favor of the portrayal of subjective experience and immediacy that do little to evince the underlying capitalist totality of existence. It is clear that Lukacs regards the representation of reality as art’s chief purpose—in this he is perhaps not in disagreement with the modernists—but he maintains that “If a writer strives to represent reality as it truly is, i.e. if he is an authentic realist, then the question of totality plays a decisive role.” “True realists” demonstrate the importance of the social context, and since the unmasking of this objective totality is a crucial element in Lukacs’ Marxist ideology, he privileges their authorial approach.

Lukacs then sets up a dialectical opposition between two elements he believes inherent to human experience. He maintains that this dialectical relation exists between the “appearance” of events as subjective, unfettered experiences and their “essence” as provoked by the objective totality of capitalism. Lukacs explains that good realists, such as Thomas Mann
Thomas Mann

Paul Thomas Mann was a German literature, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and 1929 Nobel Prize for Literature, known for his series of highly symbolic and irony epic novels and novellas, noted for their insight into the psychology of the artist and the intellectual....
, create a contrast between the consciousnesses of their characters (appearance) and a reality independent of them (essence). According to Lukacs, Mann succeeds because he creates this contrast, conversely, modernist writers fail because they portray reality only as it appears to themselves and their characters—subjectively-- and “fail to pierce the surface” of these immediate, subjective experiences “to discover the underlying essence, i.e. the real factors that relate their experiences to the hidden social forces that produce them.” The pitfalls of relying on immediacy are manifold, according to Lukacs. Because the prejudices inculcated by the capitalist system are so insidious, they cannot be escaped without the abandonment of subjective experience and immediacy in the literary sphere. They can only be superseded by realist authors who “abandon and transcend the limits of immediacy, by scrutinizing all subjective experiences and measuring them against social reality;” this is no easy task. Lukacs relies on Hegelian dialectics to explain how the relationship between this immediacy and abstraction effects a subtle indoctrination on the part of capitalist totality. The circulation of money, he explains, as well as other elements of capitalism, is entirely abstracted away from its place in the broader capitalist system, and therefore appears as a subjective immediacy, which elides its position as a crucial element of objective totality. Although abstraction can lead to the concealment of objective reality, it is necessary for art, and Lukacs believes that realist authors can successfully employ it “to penetrate the laws governing objective reality, and to uncover the deeper, hidden, mediated, not immediately perceptible of relationships that go to make up society.” After a great deal of intellectual effort, Lukacs claims a successful realist can discover these objective relationships and give them artistic shape in the form of a character's subjective experience. Then, by employing the technique of abstraction, the author can portray the character’s experience of objective reality as the same kind of subjective, immediate experience that characterize totality’s influence on non-fictional individuals. The best realists, he claims, “depict the vital, but not immediately obvious forces at work in objective reality. They do so with such profundity and truth that the products of their imagination can potentially receive confirmation from subsequent historical events. The true masterpieces of realism can be appreciated as “wholes” which depict a wide-ranging and exhaustive objective reality like the one that exists in the non-fictional world. After advancing his formulation of a desirable literary school, a realism that depicts objective reality, Lukacs turns once again to the proponents of modernism. Citing Nietzsche, who argues that “the mark of every form of literary decadence…is that life no longer dwells in the totality,” Lukacs strives to debunk modernist portrayals, claiming they reflect not on objective reality, but instead proceed from subjectivity to create a “home-made model of the contemporary world.” The abstraction (and immediacy) inherent in modernism portrays “essences” of capitalist domination divorced from their context, in a way that takes each essence in “isolation,” rather than taking into account the objective totality that is the foundation for all of them. Lukacs believes that the “social mission of literature” is to clarify the experience of the masses, and in turn show these masses that their experiences are influenced by the objective totality of capitalism, and his chief criticism of modernist schools of literature is that they fail to live up to this goal, instead proceeding inexorably towards more immediate, more subjective, more abstracted versions of fictional reality that ignore the objective reality of the capitalist system. Realism, because it creates apparently subjective experiences that demonstrate the essential social realities that provoke them, is for Lukacs the only defensible or valuable literary school of the early twentieth century.

Ontology of Social Being

Later in life Lukács undertook a major exposition on the ontology of social being, which has been partly published in English in three volumes. The work is a systematic treatment of dialectical philosophy in its materialist form.

Bibliography

The following is a partial bibliography of the writings of Georg Lukács. Many of his works are compilations of essays written and published separately at an earlier date than that listed below.

  • Soul and Form, 1910
  • Theory of the Novel, 1920
  • History and Class Consciousness
    History and Class Consciousness

    Georg Luk?cs' History and Class Consciousness Class consciousness, as described by Georg Luk?cs's famous History and Class Consciousness , is opposed to any psychology conception of consciousness, which forms the basis of individual or mass psychology ....
    , 1923
  • Lenin: A Study on the Unity of His Thought, 1924
  • The Historical Novel, 1937
  • The Young Hegel, 1938
  • Realism in the Balance, 1938
  • Goethe and His Age, 1946
  • Studies in European Realism, 1948
  • German Realists in the Nineteenth Century, 1951
  • The Destruction of Reason, 1954
  • Essays on Thomas Mann, 1955
  • The Meaning of Contemporary Realism, 1957
  • Solzhenitsyn, 1970
  • Writer and Critic, 1971
  • Conversations with Lukács, 1974
  • The Ontology of Social Being, 1978


Translations

  • The Historical Novel , Georg Lukacs, University of Nebraska Press, 1983. Translated into English by Hannah Mitchell and Stanley Mitchell
    Stanley Mitchell

    Stanley Mitchell is a British academic and author. He was born in London and attended Christ's College in Finchley, North London, which included a period of Evacuations of civilians in Britain during World War II to Biggleswade during World War II....
    . (ISBN 0803279108)


See also

  • Theodor Adorno
  • Max Horkheimer
    Max Horkheimer

    Max Horkheimer was a Germany philosopher and sociologist, and a founding member of the Frankfurt School)....
  • Antonio Gramsci
    Antonio Gramsci

    Antonio Gramsci was an Italian philosopher, writer, politician and political theorist. A founding member and onetime leader of the Communist Party of Italy, he was imprisoned by Benito Mussolini's Fascist regime....
  • Louis Althusser
    Louis Althusser

    Louis Pierre Althusser was a Marxist philosophy. He was born in Algeria and studied at the ?cole Normale Sup?rieure in Paris, where he eventually became Professor of Philosophy....
  • Leo Kofler
    Leo Kofler

    Leo Kofler was a social philosopher from Cologne. He ranks with the Marburg politicologists Wolfgang Abendroth and the Frankfurt school theoreticians Max Horkheimer and Theodor W....
  • Istvan Meszaros
    István Mészáros

    Istv?n M?sz?ros is a Hungary Marxist philosopher, and Professor Emeritus at the University of Sussex. He held the Chair of Philosophy at Sussex for fifteen years and was earlier Professor of Philosophy and Social Science for four years at York University....
  • Max Adler
    Max Adler

    Max Adler may refer to:*Max Adler , American businessman and philanthropist*Max Adler , Austrian social theorist...
  • Ágnes Heller
    Ágnes Heller

    ?gnes Heller is a Hungarian philosopher. A prominent Marxist thinker at first, she moved onto a liberal, social-democratic position later in her career....


External links

  • on marxists.org
  • Múlt-kor Történelmi portál (Past-Age Historic Portal):
  • published in Other Voices, v.1 n.1, 1998.