|
Georg Lukacs's Philosophy of Praxis: From Neo-Kantianism to Marxism
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
Georg Lukacs' early Marxist philosophy of the 1920s laid the foundations of Critical Theory. However the evaluation of Lukacs' philosophical contribution has been largely determined by one-sided readings of eminent theorists like Adorno, Habermas, Honneth or even Lukacs himself. This book offers a new reconstruction of Lukacs' early Marxist work, capable of restoring its dialectical complexity by highlighting its roots in his neo-Kantian, 'pre-Marxist' period. In his pre-Marxist work Lukacs sought to articulate a critique of formalism from the standpoint of a dubious mystical ethics of revolutionary praxis. Consequently, Lukacs discovered a more coherent and realistic answer to his philosophical dilemmas in Marxism. At the same time, he retained his neo-Kantian reservations about idealist dialectics. In his reading of historical materialism he combined non-idealist, non-systematic historical dialectics with an emphasis on conscious, collective, transformative praxis. Reformulated in this way Lukacs' classical argument plays a central role within a radical Critical Theory.
Author Biography
Konstantinos Kavoulakos is associate professor of Social and Political Philosophy/Philosophy of Culture at the University of Crete, Greece.
ReviewsProviding a timely reassessment of Georg Lukacs's History and Class Consciousness, Konstantinos Kavoulakos rescues the critical potential of Lukacs's theory of reification and transformative praxis from its long-congealed history of misreading and mistranslation, letting us see it with fresh new eyes, and letting it speak to our own troubled times. * Nikolas Kompridis, Research Professor in Philosophy and Political Thought, Australian Catholic University, Australia * In its orientation toward social transformation and toward new experiments in the meaning of being human, Lukacs's philosophy of praxis was too far ahead of its time. Its time has finally come, and Kavoulakos has given us an interpretation of Lukacs's revolutionary Marxism that is a fit for this moment in history. His careful recovery of Lukacs's neo-Kantian formation together with his meticulous reconstruction of the core arguments of the "Reification" essay make Kavoulakos's text a vital contribution to contemporary critical theory. * J. M. Bernstein, Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research, USA * Kavoulakos's book is an outstanding piece of scholarship that shows, with deep insight, how Georg Lukacs was able to give a unique philosophical foundation to revolutionary politics in "History and Class-Consciousness" (1923) by combining Neokantian and Hegelian concepts with the Marxist theoretical foundations. Lukacs's philosophy of praxis is still relevant today and cannot be reduced, as so many critics have argued, to an "idealist" argument. * Michael Loewy, Emeritus Research Director of Sociology, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France *
|