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  1. Review of Lukács’ book The Historical Novel by Viktor Shklovsky, 1939 (excerpt) from “The Young Hegel” (1938) Hegel's Economics, Frankfurt period Rationale and Defence of Objective Idealism, Jena 1801-03. Wartime Works. On Fascism, 1933-42 Four Studies on Nietzsche, 1934-43 Franz Mehring. On the 20th anniversary of his death, 1939

  2. 23 de out. de 2023 · Resumo. O artigo identifica, expõe e discute algumas das teses fortes de György Lukács em sua Ontologia, quando o autor critica o que ele denomina como “certo dualismo metodológico”, em variantes teóricas objetivistas e subjetivistas, influentes no século XX e repercussivas na contemporaneidade, de todo modo, deformadoras do estatuto e das categorias sociais, em formulações ...

  3. 7 de abr. de 2022 · The qualitatively new: Sartre and Postone contra Lukács. The concept of totality is central to Lukács’ theory and politics. Totality, as putative ‘real abstraction’, is a heuristic of sorts, which he believed was necessary to place front and centre to correct the encroaching positivism in the form of evolutionary Marxism that was gaining a foothold amongst his contemporaries (Lukács ...

  4. 16 de dez. de 2023 · Introduction. György Lukács (Budapest, 1885–1971) had no genuine professional encounter with law, the fact notwithstanding that he received doctorate in scienciarum politicarum (1906) under the direction of jurisprudent Felix Somló at Kolozsvár (now Cluj-Napoca, Romania), and while at Heidelberg during the Great War, he befriended Max ...

  5. 9 de fev. de 2008 · At the end of his life György Lukács described his intellectual career as ‘my way to Marx’ [mein Weg zu Marx]. By this he meant that his professional life can be interpreted as an attempt to get to the real Marx. In this paper I use this expression in a narrower and more direct meaning: I attempt to present the road at the end of which the young Lukács arrived at a Marxist standpoint.

  6. Marxists Internet Archive

  7. 9 de abr. de 2024 · György Lukács (born April 13, 1885, Budapest, Hungary—died June 4, 1971, Budapest) was a Hungarian Marxist philosopher, writer, and literary critic who influenced the mainstream of European communist thought during the first half of the 20th century. His major contributions include the formulation of a Marxist system of aesthetics that ...