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Philosophy and Revolution From Hegel to Sartre, and from Marx to Mao
Dunayevskaya, Raya http://www.connexions.org/CxArchive/MIA/dunayevskaya/works/phil-rev/index.htm http://www.marxists.org/archive/dunayevskaya/works/phil-rev/index.htm
Publisher: Columbia University Press Year Published: 1989 First Published: 1973 Resource Type: Book
Dunayevskaya argues in favour of a re-evaluation of the theoretical philosophy of Hegel and its application by Marx and the later Lenin to the history of mankind.
Abstract: -
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part One: Why Hegel? Why Now? 1. Absolute Negativity as New Beginning i) The Phenomenology of Mind, or Experiences of Consciousness ii) The Science of Logic, or Attitudes to Objectivity iii) The Philosophy of Mind: A Movement from Practice? 2. A New Continent of Thought i) The 1840s: Birth of Historical Materialism ii) The 1850s: The Grundrisse, Then and Now a) Progressive Epochs of Social Formations b) The "Automaton" and the Worker iii) The Adventures of the Commodity as Fetish 3. The Shock of Recognition and the Philosophic Ambivalence of Lenin
Part Two. Alternatives Introduction 4. Leon Trotsky as Theoretician i) The Theory of Permanent Revolution ii) The Nature of the Russian Economy, or Making a Fixed Particular into a New Universal iii) Leadership, Leadership 5. The Thought of Mao Tse-tung i) Discontinuities and Continuities a) The Sino-Soviet Conflict b) That Crucial Year 1965 and "The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution", 1966-69 ii) From Contradiction to Contradiction to Contradiction ii) Alienation and Revolution a) Hong Kong Interview b) Sheng Wu-lien: The Challenge from the Left 6. Jean-Paul Sartre i) The Progressive-Regressive Method ii) The Dialectic and the Fetish Part Three. Economic Reality and the Dialectics of Liberation 7. The African Revolutions and the World Economy i) Neocolonialism and the Totality of the World Crisis ii) New Human Relations or Tragedies Like Biafra? 8. State Capitalism and the East European Revolts i) The Movement from Practice is Itself a Form of Theory ii) Theory and Theory iii) Once Again, Praxis and the Quest for Universality 9. New Passions and New Forces
Notes Selected Bibliography Index
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