Fifty years of Studies

Similar documents
SOVIET RUSSIAN DIALECTICAL MA TERIALISM [DIAMAT]

JOHN DEWEY STUDIES IN CENTRAL EUROPE: ELI KRAMER INTERVIEWS EMIL VISNOVSKY

THE INTOXICATION OF POWER

Marxism and the Leninist Revolutionary Model

ROBERT C. TUCKER,

The Contribution of Catholic Christians to Social Renewal in East Germany

Contemporary Development of Marxist Philosophy in China

May 16, 1989 Meeting between Mikhail Gorbachev and Deng Xiaoping (Excerpts)

KIM JONG IL ON HAVING A CORRECT VIEWPOINT AND UNDERSTANDING OF THE JUCHE PHILOSOPHY

The World After the Collapse of Marxism and the Failure of Secularism

The History and Political Economy of the Peoples Republic of China ( )

Book Reviews RJHIS 4 (2) Stephen Kotkin, Stalin. Volume I. Paradoxes of Power, , New York, Penguin Press, Ionuț Mircea Marcu *

The Paradox of Democracy

Kent Academic Repository

MARXISM AND POST-MARXISM GVPT 445

Office: 2139 Humanities Hall Phone: Office Hours: M 2-3:00; W 9-10:00; Th 9:45-10:45 and by appointment

Uniwersytet Papieski Jana Pawła II w Krakowie

MARXIST ETHICAL THEORY IN THE SOVIET UNION

MARXISM AND ALTERNATIVES

IMAGINATION AND REFLECTION: INTERSUBJECTIVITY FICHTE'S: GRUNDLAGE OF 1794

CHRISTIAN STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY CHINA. Jason T. S. Lam Institute of Sino-Christian Studies, Hong Kong, China. Abstract

http / /politics. people. com. cn /n1 /2016 / 0423 /c html

PHILOSOPHICAL LOGIC AND LOGICAL PHILOSOPHY

Russian History Since 1900 (

John Thornhill: Theologian of the Church

PHENOMENOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF WITTGENSTEIN'S PHILOSOPHY

Testament of George Lukacs

Karl Marx. Karl Marx ( ), German political philosopher and revolutionary, the most important of all

ntroduction to Socialist Humanism: An International Symposium by Eri...

Various historical aims of research

Future of Orthodoxy in the Near East

Guidelines on Global Awareness and Engagement from ATS Board of Directors

Outline: Thesis Statement: Grasping a firm overview of the definition, history, and methodology of Christian

Document No. 9: Record of Conversation between Mikhail. Gorbachev and Egon Krenz. November 1, 1989

Record of Conversation between Aleksandr Yakovlev and Zbigniew Brzezinski, October 31, 1989

510: Theories and Perspectives - Classical Sociological Theory

STANISŁAW BRZOZOWSKI S CRITICAL HERMENEUTICS

Marxism Of The Era Of Imperialism

Sevo Tarifa COMRADE ENVER HOXHA S SPEECH AT THE MOSCOW MEETING A WORK OF HISTORIC IMPORTANCE THE 8 NENTORI PUBLISHING HOUSE TIRANA 1981

2.1.2: Brief Introduction to Marxism

What 3-4 qualities are most important to your congregation in your new rabbi?

18. THE PERIOD OF TRANSITION TO THE NEW ECONOMIC POLICY; THE STRUGGLE AGAINST THE OPPORTUNIST FACTIONS OF TROTSKY, BUKHARIN AND OTHERS

Mao Zedong ON CONTRADICTION August 1937

KARL KAUTSKY: SELECTED POLITICAL WRITINGS


Coda: Ten Questions for a Diplomat

Department of Philosophy

Care of the Soul: Service-Learning and the Value of the Humanities

Editor s Introduction

The Vocation Movement in Lutheran Higher Education

DEGREE OPTIONS. 1. Master of Religious Education. 2. Master of Theological Studies

The Comparison of Marxism and Leninism

DOCUMENT. Issued by the Department of Propaganda of the Central Committee of the CPC: No. (2004) 13

St. Oswald s Anglican Church Glen Iris MISSION ACTION PLAN. October 2013

University of Fribourg, 24 March 2014

Japanese Historian Amino Yoshihiko s Interpretation from the Viewpoint of the People on the Relationship between Religion and Secular Authority

Russian History II (HST 108): 1861 to 2014

ESSAYS IN HONOR OF CARL G. HEMPEL

Communism, Socialism, Capitalism and the Russian Revolution

Arabic sciences between theory of knowledge and history, Review

Christian-Marxist dialogue: Church leaders advocate an unrealistic option

Today we re gonna start a number of lectures on two thinkers who reject the idea

SYNTHESE HISTORICAL LIBRARY

Ladies and Gentlemen, welcome to my talk. My topic is "Theory of knowledge - Thomas S. Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend" I want to tell you simple story

Reason Papers Vol. 37, no. 1. Blackledge, Paul. Marxism and Ethics. Ithaca, NY: State University of New York Press, 2011.

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

Page 1 of 6 Transcript by Rev.com

Honours Programme in Philosophy

New people and a new type of communication Lyudmila A. Markova, Russian Academy of Sciences

1. STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO IDENTIFY AND EXPLAIN THE CAUSES AND EFFECTS OF THE RISE OF TOTALITARIANISM AND COMMUNISM

INTRODUCTION TO THINKING AT THE EDGE. By Eugene T. Gendlin, Ph.D.

Social Salvation. It is quite impossible to have a stagnate society. It is human nature to change, progress

Incorporation of the Youfra members into the SF O

STUDIES IN PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION

CENTER FOR FLORIDA HISTORY ORAL HISTORY PROGRAM

GREAT CATHOLIC PARISHES

Methodological criticism vs. ideology and hypocrisy Lawrence A. Boland, FRSC Simon Fraser University There was a time when any university-educated

Rev Bob Klein First UU Church Stockton February 7, 2016 DARWIN & EVOLUTION

This book is an introduction to contemporary Christologies. It examines how fifteen theologians from the past forty years have understood Jesus.

Johanna Erzberger Catholic University of Paris Paris, France

HISTORY 1400: MODERN WESTERN TRADITIONS

Taking Religion Seriously

The Soviet Union vs. Human Nature

CLASSICAL SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY Sociology 475

Programme Year Semester Course title

A HISTORY OF WINEBRENNER THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY IN THREE MOVEMENTS

Graduate Studies in Theology

AP European History. Sample Student Responses and Scoring Commentary. Inside: Short Answer Question 4. Scoring Guideline.

Philosophy of Science. Ross Arnold, Summer 2014 Lakeside institute of Theology

NICHOLAS J.J. SMITH. Let s begin with the storage hypothesis, which is introduced as follows: 1

Framing the Essential Questions: A Tool for Discerning and Planning Mission 6

CONTENTS. The Past As Prologue: By Way of Introduction... 1

SUMMER SERMON SERIES 2016 The Movements of Judaism and their Founders V: MORDECAI KAPLAN AND RECONSTRUCTIONIST JUDAISM.

Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind. By Mark A. Noll. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011, xii+

Introduction to Deductive and Inductive Thinking 2017

Course Description: Required Course Textbooks:

Exploring the Paths for the Popularization of Marxism With New Media in China

STATEMENT ON CHURCH POLITY, PROCEDURES, AND THE RESOLUTION OF DISAGREEMENTS IN THE LIGHT OF RECENT UNION ACTIONS ON MINISTERIAL ORDINATION

Preface to Chinese translation of The Origins of English Individualism. Alan Macfarlane

Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology

Transcription:

Stud East Eur Thought (2011) 63:1 5 DOI 10.1007/s11212-010-9129-4 EDITORIAL Fifty years of Studies E. M. Swiderski Published online: 27 November 2010 Ó Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2010 This issue marks the fiftieth anniversary of a journal with a divided identity, as indicated by two consecutive titles. Founded in 1960 1961 as SST Studies in Soviet Thought the journal metamorphosed in 1993 into SEET its present incarnation. As SST the journal was to reflect a clear research methodology defined by its founder, J. M. Bochenski, in his programmatic lead article to SST 1961, 1; On Soviet Studies. The Communist world was, according to Bochenski, an exceedingly complex and dynamic reality, though often misrepresented and misunderstood as a result of the woefully inadequate preparation of many of those who undertook to comment on it. He wrote: Sovietology [both in general and with reference to philosophical sovietology ] is a very difficult field of research (italics in the original). ( ) it is a discipline [with] a highly questionable privilege of being loved by a large crowd of dilettantes and cranks. Who is not interested in Communism and in the Soviet Union? Hundred, if not thousands, of people who do not understand a word of Russian, who do not know even the ABCs of the subject and of its methods, [yet] are constantly writing and talking about it. So great was Bochenski s conviction with regard to the skills needed to understand the communist phenomenon that he, together with a handful of students and colleagues, established, in 1958, what was to be a unique institution the Institute of East European Studies attached to the chair of modern and contemporary philosophy in the University of Fribourg. The Institute became a philosophical think tank devoted to careful, systematic research into Soviet thought as well as a training ground for future students of Soviet philosophy. The skills required included knowledge of the Russian language, Russian history, Marxism and its history, Leninism (including the Stalinist form), and the history and organization of the Soviet Communist Party (and its affiliates). In Fribourg in the early sixties a quaint, atmospheric medieval town, cows and sheep grazing virtually E. M. Swiderski (&) Université de Fribourg, Portes de Fribourg, 1763 Granges-Paccot, Switzerland e-mail: Edward.Swiderski@unifr.ch

2 E. M. Swiderski within a stone s throw from Miséricorde (the main building of the Catholic University) and the Albertinum (the residence of an august group of Dominicans, each of whom was an acknowledged master in his academic field) with a splendid glimpse of the préalpes beckoning to anyone with a mind to trek and climb a full program of study was implemented to ensure this basic proficiency. It was assumed that this preparation was an accompaniment to philosophical studies at the university, the outcome of which would be, for the diligent student, a doctorate obtained for a dissertation on some theme from Soviet philosophy. In the Preface to the same SST no. 1 Bochenski notes with evident relish that in the course of the 2 years since its founding the Institute s members and external collaborators had already produced eighteen volumes and moreover had launched what counts among the major scholarly contributions of Fribourg sovietology the systematic preparation of the bibliography of Soviet philosophy. Some of these volumes became the founding texts of Sovietica, the monograph series accompanying SST, also published by Kluwer in Dordrecht (today absorbed by Springer), which when it ceased publication following the demise of the Soviet Union numbered no less 57 volumes! Bochenski was assisted, indeed seconded, by Thomas J. Blakeley ( Tom for all who knew him), who edited the journal from his offices at Boston College until his untimely death in 1988. Throughout those years, the journal carried the names of three affiliated institutions on its front cover: the Institute in Fribourg, the Geschwister-Scholl Institute in the University of Munich (directed by one of Bochenski s closest collaborators, Nikolaus Lobkowicz), and Boston College, thus ensuring an international scope. Bochenski prided himself on being an analytical philosopher, one who practiced hard analysis in the style and according to the canons of rigour of the Lwow-Warsaw school (founded by Kazimierz Twardowski). While he was not dogmatic in this respect, being as well an accomplished historian of philosophy (cf. the classic history of philosophical logic, the history of contemporary European philosophy, a study which contained, unusually, a chapter on philosophy in the Soviet Union), his analytic bent helped to define how he and his disciples approached Soviet philosophy of the day. SST was meant to be a kind of ongoing report and analysis of Soviet philosophy as a current of thought developing within the Soviet bloc as a whole, but especially in Soviet Russia. While background (history, culture, leading political personalities) certainly had to be taken into consideration, it remains that the kind of research published in the first decade or so of SST s existence had to do above all with arguments, with concepts, large and small scale philosophical theory, ranging over the problems which at that time exercised Soviet philosophers. SST, in other words, became the counterpart to the kinds of publications by Soviet philosophers appearing in Voprosy filosofii as well as in such long-lived monograph series as Nad čem rabotajut, o čem sporjat filosofy, that is, the aim was systematic. It was not unusual to read articles in SST pointing to interesting, innovative work by Soviet philosophers, though the terms interesting and innovative had a meaning which could not be dissociated from constraints arising out of the Soviet mirovozzrenie.

Fifty years of Studies 3 This last caveat notwithstanding, the first decade of SST, more or less, was a dynamic period, given that it was a time when in the Soviet Union the so-called thaw exercised a positive effect on philosophy as well (giving rise to the generation of thinkers known today as the shest desjatniki ). Things took a turn for the worse in Soviet philosophy following the forceful disruption of the Prague Spring and the proclamation of the Brezhnev Doctrine. Ideologically, the seventies in the Soviet Union became the era of the naučno-tekhničeskaja revoljucija, on the one hand, as well as rhetoric about real or developed socialism and the socialist way of life, on the other. These were not auspicious years for the journal, in part because not a few students of Soviet philosophy lost interest in studying the now somewhat tedious, monotonous works of their Soviet counterparts that later, with the advent of the perestrojka, would come to be associated with system-wide stagnation (zastoj), raising calls for novoe myšlenie. Throughout the seventies, a number of texts did appear in SST written by philosophers who had left the Soviet Union and were re-examining to some degree particular tenets as well as the general line of Soviet thinking. Nevertheless, skimming the pages of the journal over the course of a decade or so, into the early 80s, one cannot but notice the shift away from living Soviet thought to, among other things, studies on Marx and Marxism generally, the history of pre-revolutionary Russian thought, Eurocommunism, Chinese Marxism, even analytic studies devoted to, for instance, the prospects for dialectical logic, and the like. At the time the journal benefited from the expertise of several German scholars associated with the Bundesinstitut für ostwissenchaftlichen Studien in Bonn (later Berlin), whose detailed reports and discussions of developments in Soviet ideology as well as philosophy appeared in English translation thanks to Blakeley s painstaking efforts (a job which in due course the undersigned assumed). It must be admitted that SST was slow in the uptake as regards developments in Soviet thinking starting in the mid-1980s prompted by Gorbachev s call for reforms. As if to acknowledge Hegel s remark about the Owl of Minerva, examination of late Soviet philosophy did not begin to appear on the pages of the journal until after the collapse of the Soviet system. Not without reason, it was Bochenski himself who made it plain that SST had run its course. In the November issue of 1991, his article appeared entitled Did we not waste our time? In it, he addressed the legacy of philosophical sovietology, so much of which owed its inspiration to him. It is hardly necessary to insist on the fact that we are witnessing the downfall, in several countries, of Soviet Communism and together with it the disappearance of its theory, Marxism-Leninism. Moreover, the general hypothesis is quite probable that Marxism-Leninism is at an end everywhere. If this is the case, then those who dedicated themselves to Marxism-Leninism are in a tragic plight for many their life-works seem to crumble. Less poetically expressed, they have to face difficult problems. But in this last respect they are not alone. If Communism collapses generally, then we too, the members and co-workers of the Fribourg Institute of East European Studies, would have to confront the urgent question: did we not waste our time and energy studying a doctrine that was to disappear so soon and so completely? (295)

4 E. M. Swiderski Bochenski takes a double line in answering his own question. On the one hand, like so many others at the time, he too is surprised that Communism collapsed; it was an event he could not have foreseen. Reasoning by analogy with great religions we assumed that Marxism-Leninism will be a durable doctrine. These religions, which acted on large masses of people, survived a 1,000 years and more. Now, as Communism was similarly a faith acting on millions, we thought that it too would exhibit the kind of persistence typical of the great religions (296 297). But, on the other hand, notwithstanding the unexpected, Bochenski comforted himself by drawing a number of general philosophical lessons from the rise and fall of communism, in particular that there was no better example than Soviet thinking of the systematic and pernicious confusion of science and Weltanschauung (which as an extreme form of contextualism is by his lights utterly alien to the scientific philosophical spirit). However rueful Bochenski may have been in acquiescing to history s verdict, his parting words as a philosophical sovietologist could provide little comfort to the editorial board for whom the question became should we go on, and if so, how? The journal officially adapted its present title in 1993, following a round of internal discussions, not all of which achieved agreement and consensus. There were voices among us who, citing the example of disbanded journals such as Problems of Communism, believed that the time had come for SST to disappear gracefully into the sunset we had done our job. Some, having come to this conclusion, stepped down from the board. However, the rising tide of the transition, the excitement generated across the former Communist world by the promise of revitalized and variegated thinking, freed from Marxist-Leninist dogma and tapping into resources that were at once culturally specific yet hopefully responsive to European and global concerns all this and more suggested to others among us that a reconstructed journal had a life to look forward to. Moreover, in a way that had not on the whole been possible for SST the new journal could pursue direct contact with East European philosophers, a few of whom initially from Russia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Hungary were invited to join the editorial board. Our internal debates about the journal s identity concerned the question whether we should retain a philosophical profile sensu stricto or embrace the emerging cultural studies paradigm along with history of ideas, perhaps even political theory given the central importance for post-communist societies and polities (not to mention thinking) of the rule-of-law, civil society, democratic procedures, etc. At least one thing was clear there could no longer be one guiding idea for the journal as represented by the kind of programmatic text Bochenski had produced in 1961. The situation, for the editor at least, has been rather like that Wittgenstein fixed by the phrase make up the rules as you go along, evidenced by, among other things, the many and varied thematic issues prepared in collaboration with guest editors. The policy of thematic issues has paid dividends of more than one kind: concentrated discussion of aspects of a single theme augments the attractiveness of the individual presentations precisely as contributions, at times in dialogue, sometimes explicitly, sometimes implicitly. That said, it is noteworthy, I think, that however much the journal remains committed to East European thought, the preponderant emphasis nevertheless has

Fifty years of Studies 5 fallen on Russia, as if to underline continuity with SST. Upcoming planned issues confirm this tendency, as does indeed the present anniversary issue, all the materials of which bear on aspects of thinking in Russia throughout the course of the twentieth century. I am particularly pleased to say that all of our authors in this issue are members of the editorial board and represent, in different ways, the consecutive stages of SST/SEET. Particular thanks for their collaboration go to Professors Kline (who was kind enough to comment on an initial draft of this text) and Scanlan, both of whom go back to the beginnings, but of course to the others as well who over the last several years have provided invaluable support and insight to help steer SEET.