Georg Lukácsâs philosophy of praxis, penned between 1918 and 1928, remains a revolutionary and apocryphal presence within Marxism. His History and Class Consciousness has inspired a century of rapture and reprobation, perhaps, as Gillian Rose suggested, because of its âinvitation to hermeneutic anarchyâ.
âFor a long time Lukácsâs detractors presented his early Marxist work as an idealist and subjectivist distortion of revolutionary Marxism. According to this critique, Lukács remained too much a Hegelian, willing to substitute the proletariat for the world spirit. Recent studies question this standard interpretation by pointing out neo-Kantian and phenomenological elements in Lukácsâs early philosophy that significantly deviate from Hegelianism. Instead, Daniel Lopez radically reverses the interpretative focus: What if the young Lukács was too less a Hegelian? Adopting a higher, Hegelian philosophical standpoint, Lopezâs meticulous scholarly study offers a charitable reading of History and Class Consciousness and, at the same time, criticizes its theoretical limitations. A much needed, substantial contribution to an emerging critical discussion on Lukács and Hegelian Marxism.â - Konstantinos Kavoulakos, University of Thessaloniki
âA fine study written with a Lukácsian attentiveness to the give-and-take of subjective and objective life - Daniel Lopez is touchingly sympathetic and incisively critical in equal parts.â - Esther Leslie, Birkbeck
Introduction
1 Prophet of Praxis: Lukács between 1918 and 1929
2 Lukács and Marxian Philosophy of Praxis
3 Reading Lukács Speculatively
Part One â Towards a Theory of Praxis
Introduction to Part One
1 â From Immediacy to Commodity Fetishism
1 Immediacy and Method
2 Form and content, Quantity and Quality, the Commodity
2 â Reification and Totality
1 Subjective and Objective Reification; Society as Second Nature
2 The Controversy over Reification
3 Fragmentation and Crisis
3 â The Standpoint of the Proletariat
1 The Principle of Labour and the Proletariat as Subject-Object of History
2 In defence of the standpoint of the proletariat
3 The self-consciousness of the commodity
Conclusion to Part One
Part Two â From Theory to Praxis
4 â Theory In Itself and for the Proletariat
1 The Contemplative Stance
2 The Ethical Idea of Praxis
3 The Critique of Naturalism
5 â The Critique of Ideology
1 The Standpoint of the Bourgeoisie
2 Sectarian, Reformism and Vulgar Marxism
3 The Actuality of Revolution
6 â The Party
1 The Party as Bearer of Imputed Consciousness
2 The Controversy over Lukácsâs Leninism
3 Party and Class
7 â Praxis
1 The Concept of the Proletariat in and for Itself
2 The Actuality of Praxis
Part Three â Praxis and Philosophy
Introduction to Part Three
8 â Lukácsâs Critique of Philosophy
1 The Antinomies of Bourgeois Philosophy
2 Lukács on Hegel and the Absolute
3 Once More on Hegel, via the Young Hegelians
9 â Praxis, the Absolute and Philosophy
1 The Philosophical Critiques of Lukács
1.1 Endless Mediation: Andrew Feenberg
1.2 Liberal Empiricism: Tom Rockmore
1.3 Shallow Immanent Critique: Richard Kilminster
1.4 Adorno as Alternative to Lukács: Timothy Hall (with Support from Gillian Rose)
2 The Critique from History
2.1 Praxis as Mediation: Trotsky and the New Left
2.2 Praxis as Logic: The Elder Lukács
2.3 Praxis as Genesis: The Baroque Melancholia of Benjamin
2.4 Praxis as Tragic Theology
3 The Critique from Philosophy
3.1 The Occluded Political Truth of Praxis
3.2 With what Should Philosophy of Praxis End?
Conclusion â Nihilism or the Virtuous Republic
Bibliography Index
All readers (academic, post-graduate and educated laymen) interested in critical theory, Marxist, Hegelian and political philosophy. All university and public libraries that maintain collections including the work of Georg Lukács.