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Former issues

Social Philosphy Alternatives in Transforming the System in Hungary – Part 1.

2009 October 1. sz szilu84
The essay focuses on presenting Peter Markus' 1988 lecture, which makes a critical analysis of the reform programs suggested that time. The lecture makes an account of almost all threats and possible mistakes that came true after the systemic change as actual experience.

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  1. A social alternative to neo-liberalism
  2. Hungary’s 1848 and the women

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Events

Women’s emancipation and human emancipation: new approaches to an old question

International Conference, Budapest, ELTE 11 November, 2015 ELTE, Gólyavár, Maria Theresia-room 1088 Múzeum krt. 6-8. Program 9 a.m.   Opening remarks: József Juhász (Head of Eastern European History Department, ELTE) Joanna Gwiazdecka (RLS Warsaw) Eszter Bartha(Eszmélet) 9.15 – 11.00 a.m. Section One Rethinking the history of women’s activism and human emancipation Francisca de Haan, Understanding … Continue reading Women’s emancipation and human emancipation: new approaches to an old question →

Társadalomkritikai és kulturális folyóirat // A quarterly journal for social critique and culture

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Online Articles

Some Remarks to Pham Bin’s Post

The American state cannot tolerate any political alternative even if it emerges on the symbolic field. However, street events were retaliated almost similarly what we had seen concerning the Arab Spring. The hysteria against rising alternatives and the brutal state repression probably have shaken the image of "the freest country" thus Occupy maybe started something. … Continue reading Some Remarks to Pham Bin’s Post →

Alexandr Zinoviev

A maverick in contemporary Russian philosophy with dozens of books, some of them published even in Hungarian. He wrote, among others, the deep-cutting critique of the Gorbachev era titled Catastroika (combining the words catastrophy and perestroika). The portrait functions as an introduction to the article by Zinoviev. Related Articles No related articles.

Nationalism versus European belonging: the usefulness of “class” in reading through “identity dilemmas” in contemporary Serbia

According to the author, nationalism can gather support from a broad range of groups in society, because it attracts very different groups on very different grounds and ways: for instance it provides political capital to the elite or gives the hope of integration to the middle and working classes – as answers to exclusions featuring … Continue reading Nationalism versus European belonging: the usefulness of “class” in reading through “identity dilemmas” in contemporary Serbia →

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  • In Memoriam Győző Lugosi (1952-2021)
  • Hungarian left-wing organizations demand adequate policies for the refugee crisis
  • Women’s emancipation and human emancipation: new approaches to an old question
  • Issue no. 104 (Winter 2014)
  • And so it begins…? First cracks in the Orbán régime

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