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100 Years of European Philosophy Since the Great War: Crisis and Reconfigurations

book
posted on 2017-01-01, 00:00 authored by Matthew Sharpe, Rory Jeffs, Jack ReynoldsJack Reynolds
This book is a collection of specifically commissioned articles on the key continental European philosophical movements since 1914. It shows how each of these bodies of thought has been shaped by their responses to the horrors set in train by World War I, and considers whether we are yet ‘post-post-war’. The outbreak of World War I in August 1914,set in chain a series of crises and re-configurations, which have continued to shape the world for a century: industrialized slaughter, the end of colonialism and European empires, the rise of the USA, economic crises, fascism, Soviet Marxism, the gulags and the Shoah. Nearly all of the major movements in European thinking (phenomenology, psychoanalysis, Hegelianism, Marxism, political theology, critical theory and neoliberalism) were forged in, or shaped by, attempts to come to terms with the global trauma of the World Wars. This is the first book to describe the development of these movements after World War I, and as such promises to be of interest to philosophers and historians of philosophy around the world.

History

Volume

25

Pagination

1-276

ISSN

0928-9518

eISSN

2215-1753

ISBN-13

978-3-319-50360-8

Language

eng

Publication classification

A7 Edited book

Copyright notice

2017, Springer International Publishing AG

Editor/Contributor(s)

Sharpe M, Jeffs R, Reynolds J

Number of chapters

14

Publisher

Springer International Publishing AG

Place of publication

Cham, Switzerland

Series

Philosophical Studies in Contemporary Culture