Home
Dialectics of the Ideal: Evald Ilyenkov and Creative Soviet Marxism
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
Dialectics of the Ideal: Evald Ilyenkov and Creative Soviet Marxism
Current price: $30.00
Barnes and Noble
Dialectics of the Ideal: Evald Ilyenkov and Creative Soviet Marxism
Current price: $30.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
In Dialectics of the Ideal: Evald Ilyenkov and Creative Soviet Marxism
Levant and Oittinen provide a window into the subterranean tradition of creative’ Soviet Marxism, which developed on the margins of the Soviet academe and remains largely outside the orbit of contemporary theory in the West. With his activity approach’, E.V. Ilyenkov, its principal figure in the post-Stalin period, makes a substantial contribution toward an anti-reductionist Marxist theory of the subject.
This highly original approach should be of interest to theorists who seek to avoid economic and cultural reductionism as well as the malaise of postmodern relativism. This volume features Levant’s translation of Ilyenkov’s
Dialectics of the Ideal
(2009), which remained unpublished until thirty years after the author’s tragic suicide in 1979, as well as additional reflections and context by contemporary scholars.
Levant and Oittinen provide a window into the subterranean tradition of creative’ Soviet Marxism, which developed on the margins of the Soviet academe and remains largely outside the orbit of contemporary theory in the West. With his activity approach’, E.V. Ilyenkov, its principal figure in the post-Stalin period, makes a substantial contribution toward an anti-reductionist Marxist theory of the subject.
This highly original approach should be of interest to theorists who seek to avoid economic and cultural reductionism as well as the malaise of postmodern relativism. This volume features Levant’s translation of Ilyenkov’s
Dialectics of the Ideal
(2009), which remained unpublished until thirty years after the author’s tragic suicide in 1979, as well as additional reflections and context by contemporary scholars.