European Intellectual History since Nietzsche
En podkast av Marci Shore
Kategorier:
25 Episoder
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Class 25: From Modernity to Post-Modernity
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 24: The Heidegger Controversy
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 23: “Antipolitics” & the Philosophy of Dissent
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 22: French Post-Structuralism: Derrida and Deconstruction
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 21: Power and Archaeology: Michel Foucault
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 20: Violence and the Sacred: René Girard
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 19: Structuralism and Anthropology
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 18: Revisionist Marxism and Existentialism
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 17: Husserl’s Children, Searching for the Other
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 16: The Second Sex
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 15: Hannah Arendt, Totalitarianism and the Nature of Evil
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 14: The Frankfurt School
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 13: French Existentialism
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 12: Heideggerean Existentialism
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 11: Phenomenology
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 10: Modernism and the Avant-Garde
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 9: Freudian Psychoanalysis
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 8: Leninism, the Rushing of History
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 7: Henri Bergson – Revolt Against Positivism
Publisert: 7.2.2024 -
Class 6: Nietzsche and the Death of God
Publisert: 7.2.2024
Ideas matter. They cross borders; they are cosmopolitan by their nature. Intellectual history is a history of intertwining conversations, a history of posing questions not easily—or ever—answered. HIST 271 is a survey of modern European intellectual history, sketching a narrative arc from the late 18th century transition to modernity through the late 20th century transition to post-modernity. (Modernity is largely about replacing God. Postmodernity begins when we give up on replacing God.) With Marci Shore, Associate Professor of History.