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Full Description
Situated Marxism analyzes theoretical practices in postwar Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union on their own terms and within their institutional, social, and historical contexts. Challenging enduring narratives of dogma and decline, twelve case studies from across the region trace how Marxist thought engaged with science, ecology, global futures, and Western philosophy, and how these engagements shaped new understandings of orthodoxy. The volume reveals a rich intellectual tradition with continuing relevance to today's debates on knowledge, crisis, and social justice.
Contents
Adela Hîncu, Stefan Baghiu, Alex Cistelecan, Christian Ferencz-Flatz - Introduction: Situating Marxism in State Socialist Europe
PART I: The Making and Unmaking of Orthodoxy
Alex Cistelecan - Orthodoxy Unraveled: Diamat and Histomat in Communist Romania
Bakar Berekashvili - Marxism, Science, and Society in Soviet Georgia
Monika Wozniak - Towards New Orthodoxy: Epistemology and Philosophy of Science in Jaros.aw .adosz and Czes.aw Nowi.ski
Ondrej Holub - Open-Minded Determinism: The Life and Ideas of Rudolf .íma
PART II: Global Issues, Socialist Concerns
Christian Ferencz-Flatz and Adela Hîncu - From Ecological Crisis to Ecological Revolution: Marxist Reflections on The Limits to Growth in Romania
Jan Mervart - Global Studies and Late Socialist Czechoslovakia
Stefan Baghiu and Alex Cistelecan - Romanian Communist Futurology as Diamat without Dialectics
Una Blagojevic - (Un)orthodoxy of the Human Rights in Yugoslavia: Genealogy and Contestations
PART III: Marxist Resignifications
Jan Surman - The Making of a Western Socialist Scholar: J.D. Bernal in Eastern Europe
Ádám Takács - Althusser Goes East: Theoretical (Anti)Humanism, the Lukács School, and the Specter of Stalinism
Martin Küpper - Aesthetic Functionalism: A Design Concept for Socialism in the GDR?
Siyaves Azeri - Humanism vs. Scientism? An Ilyenkovian Critique of Capital's Dualities and Dichotomies .



