03829nam 22005891c 450 991078966610332120200115203623.01-4725-4656-31-283-20795-897866132079511-4411-9763-X10.5040/9781472546562(CKB)2670000000107197(EBL)743208(OCoLC)741690711(SSID)ssj0000522865(PQKBManifestationID)11340821(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000522865(PQKBWorkID)10538586(PQKB)10257008(MiAaPQ)EBC743208(Au-PeEL)EBL743208(CaPaEBR)ebr10867499(CaONFJC)MIL320795(OCoLC)893335979(UtOrBLW)bpp09255925(EXLCZ)99267000000010719720140929d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrGeorg Lukacs reconsidered critical essays in politics, philosophy and aesthetics edited by Michael J. ThompsonLondon New York Continuum 2011.1 online resource (264 p.)Includes index.1-4411-6694-7 1-4411-0876-9 Includes bibliographical references and indexPart I: Lukács' Philosophical Legacy -- 1. Lukács's and the Idealist Legacy Stephen Eric Bronner -- 2. Lukács and Marx After Marxism Tom Rockmore -- 3. Rethinking Reification Timothy Hall -- 4. Chvostismus und Dialektik: Lukács' Reply to His Critics Michael Löwy -- Part II: Extending Aesthetic Theory -- 5. A Post-Adornian Aesthetics Peter Uwe Hohendahl -- 6. The Development of the Novel Werner Jung -- 7. The Fight for Freedom of the Arts: Lukács on Dante and Goethe János Keleman -- 8. A Hegelian-Marxist Philosophy of Political Imagination Norman Fischer -- Part III: Politics, Society and Critical Theory -- 9. Lukács' Concept of Time Nichole Shippen -- 10. Lukács' Ambivalent Jurisprudence Katie Terezakis -- 11. Back to History? Lukács and the Antimonies of Communicative Critical Theory Konstantinos Kavoulakos -- 12. Reification and the Progress of Technology Andrew Feenberg -- 13. Lukács and the Revival of Critical Theory: Reconsidering the Ontologie Michael J. Thompson -- Bibliography -- IndexGeorg Lukács stands as a towering figure in the areas of critical theory, literary criticism, aesthetics, ethical theory and the philosophy of Marxism and German Idealism. Yet, despite his influence throughout the twentieth century, his contributions to the humanities and theoretical social sciences are marked by neglect. What has been lost is a crucial thinker in the tradition of critical theory, but also, by extension, a crucial set of ideas that can be used to shed new light on the major problems of contemporary society. This book reconsiders Lukács' intellectual contributions in the light of recent intellectual developments in political theory, aesthetics, ethical theory, and social and cultural theory. An international team of contributors contend that Lukács' ideas and theoretical contributions have much to offer the theoretical paucity of the present. Ultimately the book reintegrates Lukács as a central thinker, not only in the tradition of critical theory, but also as a major theorist and critic of modernity, of capitalism, and of new trends in political theory, cultural criticism and legal theoryPhilosophy: aesthetics199/.439Thompson Michael1973-UtOrBLWUtOrBLWUkLoBPBOOK9910789666103321Georg Lukacs reconsidered3749866UNINA