Imagen del autor

Georg Lukács (1885–1971)

Autor de Historia y consciencia de clase

265+ Obras 3,828 Miembros 17 Reseñas 9 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

George Steiner calls Lukacs "the one major critical talent to have emerged from the gray servitude of the Marxist world." This well-known writer on European literature combines a Marxist-Hegelian concern for the historical process with great artistic sensitivity. Lukacs joined the Hungarian mostrar más Communist party in 1918, serving in its first government until the defeat of Bela Kun. He spent many years in exile, first in Berlin and then, from 1933 to 1945, in Moscow, writing and studying. He later became a professor of aesthetics in Budapest, but after the 1956 revolution he was stripped of influence because of his too-friendly attitude to non-Marxist literatures. Steiner has written: "A Communist by conviction, a dialectical materialist by virtue of his critical method, he has nevertheless kept his eyes resolutely on the past. Despite pressure from his Russian hosts, Lukacs gave only perfunctory notice to the much-heralded achievements of Soviet Realism. Instead, he dwelt on the great lineage of eighteenth and nineteenth century European poetry and fiction. The critical perspective is rigorously Marxist, but the choice of themes is central European and conservative." Lukacs has concentrated mainly on criticism of Russian, French, and German authors and often writes in German. Robert J. Clements has reported that Hungarian young people regard him as somewhat passe. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: From the Marxists Internet Archive

Series

Obras de Georg Lukács

Teoria de la Novela (1920) 602 copias
La Novela Historica (1937) 289 copias
Lenin (1924) 189 copias
Studies in European Realism (1656) 97 copias
Saggi sul realismo (1950) 64 copias
Essays on Thomas Mann (1741) 62 copias
Goethe and His Age (1947) 55 copias
Solzhenitsyn (1970) 49 copias
Conversaciones con Lukács (1901) 37 copias
Realism in Our Time (1964) 32 copias
Diario (1910-1911) (1981) 15 copias
Estetica (1963) 8 copias
Thomas Mann (1949) 6 copias
Problemas del Realismo (1966) 5 copias
Estetik-3-Lukacs (2016) 4 copias
Det gl̃ler realismen (1975) 4 copias
Dostoevskij (2000) 4 copias
Briefwechsel 1902 - 1917 (1982) 4 copias
Il giovane Marx (1965) 4 copias
Ästhetik. 4 3 copias
Ästhetik. 3 3 copias
Ästhetik. 1 3 copias
Scritti sul romance (1995) 2 copias
Goethes Faust (1981) 2 copias
Arte, filosofia, politica (1982) 2 copias
Textes (1985) 2 copias
La Théorie du roman (1981) 2 copias
Studi sul Faust (2006) 2 copias
Il Dramma moderno. (1976) 2 copias
Thomas Mann 1 copia
Marksist imgelem (2004) 1 copia
Estetica (2015) 1 copia
1 1 copia
Aklin Yikimi 2 (2000) 1 copia
Aklin Yikimi 1 (2016) 1 copia
Estetik II 1 copia
ROMAN KURAMI 1 copia
ESTETİK 1 copia
ESTETİK I 1 copia
ESTETİK II 1 copia
Curriculum vitae (1982) 1 copia
Estetica 1 copia
Osobenost estetskog (1987) 1 copia
Intimna drama 1 copia
Thomas Mann 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Rob Roy (1817) — Introducción, algunas ediciones2,630 copias
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contribuidor, algunas ediciones917 copias
Aesthetics and Politics (2007) 643 copias
Anna Karenina [Norton Critical Edition, 1st ed.] (1970) — Contribuidor — 134 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Lukács, Georg
Nombre legal
Löwinger, György Bernát (birth)
Otros nombres
Lukács, György
Fecha de nacimiento
1885-04-13
Fecha de fallecimiento
1971-06-04
Lugar de sepultura
National Graveyard in Fiumei Street, Kerepesdűlő, Józsefváros, Budapest, Hungary
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Hungary
Lugar de nacimiento
Budapest, Austria-Hungary
Lugar de fallecimiento
Budapest, Hungary
Lugares de residencia
Budapest, Hungary (death)
Budapest, Austro-Hungary (birth|now Hungary)
Educación
Royal Hungarian University of Kolozsvár (Dr. rer. oec.|1906)
University of Budapest (Ph.D|1909)
Ocupaciones
philosopher
literary critic
essayist
literary historian
aesthetician
Relaciones
Heller, Agnes (Colleague)
Organizaciones
University of Budapest
Sonntagskreis
Hungarian Communist Party
Premios y honores
Goethepreis der Stadt Frankfurt (1970)
Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1945)
Biografía breve
Lukács was known for his books of Marxist philosophy and literary criticism. Lukacs studied in Budapest, Berlin and Heidelberg, and published his first book, "Soul and Form", in 1910. This was followed by "The Theory of the Novel" (1916). In 1918 Lukacs joined the Hungarian Communist Party and supported the Soviet Republic established by Bela Kun in 1919. After the overthrow of the Soviet Republic Lukacs was forced into exile and lived in Vienna for ten years. In 1923 he published "History and Class Consciousness". From 1930 to 1944 he lived in the Soviet Union, after which he returned to Hungary. Lukacs was highly critical of the government of Matyas Rakosi and became a supporter of the reformers led by Laszlo Rajk. In 1956 He was appointed as Minister of Culture. However, following the fall of the 1956 revolution Lukacs was deported to Romania but was allowed to return to Budapest in 1957. In his late years he was a professor of several universities and was noted as an ordinary member of the Academy of Sciences (Hungary).

Miembros

Reseñas

Lukács was Very Serious about the novel, and the many dangers of constructing it in certain ways. No frivolity here, people! Buckle down!
 
Denunciada
KatrinkaV | otra reseña | Feb 26, 2024 |
Written in 1955-1956 during the first uncertain "thaw" after Stalin's death, this book marked a considerable departure from Lukacs' rigid posture of the immediate postwar years, when he denounced practically all important Western writers as reactionary warmongers. It is fairly detached in manner and at times almost mellow. Lukacs makes a somewhat grudging attempt to make sense of Kafka, and he backs up his criticism of modern music and Schoenberg with a quote from the Western "modernist" Adorno. (1963)… (más)
 
Denunciada
GLArnold | Jul 1, 2023 |
Although it consists of 350 pages of largely turgid Leninist analysis of Western literature of debatable relevance to literary criticism, the book is not without merit. Historical-sociological analysis comes to life in the more strictly literary parts of the book, notably in contrasting the novel and the drama. (1963)
 
Denunciada
GLArnold | 3 reseñas más. | Jul 1, 2023 |
"If we are to understand not only the direct impact of Marx on the development of German thought but also his sometimes extremely indirect influence, an exact knowledge of Hegel, of both his greatness and his limitation, is absolutely indispensable."- from the preface. It is well known that Hegel exerted a major influence on the development of Marx's thought. This circumstance led Lukács, one of the chief Marxist theoreticians of this century, to embark on his exploration of Hegelian antecedents in the German intellectual tradition, their concrete expression in the work of Hegel himself, and later syntheses of seemingly contradictory modes of though. Four phases of Hegel's intellectual development are examined: "Hegel's early republican phase," "the crisis in Hegel's views on society and the earliest beginnings of his dialectical method," "rationale and defense of objective idealism," and "the breach with Schelling and The Phenomenology of Mind." Lukács completed this study in 1938, but because of the imminent outbreak of war, it was not published until the late 1940s. A revised German edition appeared in 1954, and it is this text that is the basis of this first English translation of the work.… (más)
 
Denunciada
LarkinPubs | Mar 1, 2023 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
265
También por
6
Miembros
3,828
Popularidad
#6,624
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
17
ISBNs
318
Idiomas
18
Favorito
9

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