Wolf Lepenies: Homo Europaeus Intellectualis Revisited

dc.contributor.authorKwiek, Marek
dc.date.accessioned2014-03-27T08:21:26Z
dc.date.available2014-03-27T08:21:26Z
dc.date.issued2003
dc.description.abstractQuestions about the intellectual's place and role in society, his tasks and obligations, the status he ascribes to himself and that society ascribes to him have recently become a significant part of the ongoing discourse in the humanities. There are different reasons in different countries for this, but whether in English-speaking countries, in Germany or, especially, in France, questions about the intellectual have been important points of reference in numerous discussions at the end of the 20th century. Lepenies' thinking convincingly shows that the dominating French discourse on the subject requires a significant supplement today, for it depicts merely a part of a larger whole which does not confine itself to France aloneFrench questions about the intellectual (from the Dreyfus affair at the turn of the 20th century to Sartre to, in turn, le silence des intellectuels in the eighties of the last century) do not exhaust the catalogue of all the questions that can and should be asked today; nor do they restrict our account of the issue of the intellectual to the adventure of being seduced by the Marxist (or Stalinist) thinking which started with the October Revolution of 1917 progressing to the middle of the seventies on the part of French writers and philosophers, followed only by their disappointment with and gradual distancing from it after the Algerian war of independence and the events of 1956 (for it is, indeed, possible to see the history of French intellectuals of the 20th century also from such a perspective); furthermore, these questions, heading mainly back through history - and mainly to that of the 20th century France - basically pass in silence the present and the future.pl_PL
dc.identifier.citationIn: Philosophie an der Schwelle des 21. Jahrhunderts, E. Czerwinska-Schupp (Hrsg.), Frankfurt a/Main and New York: Peter Lang, 2003, pp. 329-349.pl_PL
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10593/10350
dc.language.isoenpl_PL
dc.subjectWolf Lepeniespl_PL
dc.subjectintellectualspl_PL
dc.subjectCentral Europepl_PL
dc.subjectpostcommunist countriespl_PL
dc.subjecttransition economiespl_PL
dc.subjectMelancholie und Gesellschaftpl_PL
dc.subjectDie Drei Kulturenpl_PL
dc.subjectAufstieg und Fall der Intellektuellen in Europapl_PL
dc.subjectGerman intellectualspl_PL
dc.subjectFrench intellectualspl_PL
dc.subjectFrench philosophypl_PL
dc.subjectmelancholy and societypl_PL
dc.subjectbetween literature and sciencepl_PL
dc.subjectphilosophy and literaturepl_PL
dc.subjectengagementpl_PL
dc.subjectpolitical involvmentpl_PL
dc.subjectphilosophy and politicspl_PL
dc.subjectEastern Europepl_PL
dc.subjectpostcommunist transitionpl_PL
dc.subjectrole of the intellectualpl_PL
dc.subjectpublic rolepl_PL
dc.subjectacademic professionpl_PL
dc.titleWolf Lepenies: Homo Europaeus Intellectualis Revisitedpl_PL
dc.typeArtykułpl_PL

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