Image de couverture de Marxism and Religion in Eastern Europe Papers Presented at the Banff International Slavic Conference, September 4-7,1974
Marxism and Religion in Eastern Europe Papers Presented at the Banff International Slavic Conference, September 4-7,1974
Titre:
Marxism and Religion in Eastern Europe Papers Presented at the Banff International Slavic Conference, September 4-7,1974
ISBN (Numéro international normalisé des livres):
9789401018708
Edition:
1st ed. 1976.
PRODUCTION_INFO:
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1976.
Description physique:
XVI, 184 p. online resource.
Collections:
Sovietica ; 36
Table des matières:
I. Marxism -- Communism and the New Marxists -- Contemporary Problems of Dialectical Materialism -- Marxist Philosophy in Czechoslovakia : The Lessons from Prague -- Marxist Philosophy in Yugoslavia : ThePraxis Group -- II. Religion -- Reluctant Bedfellows : The Catholic Church and the Polish State, 1918-1939 -- The Catholic Church and the Soviet Government in Soviet Occupied East Europe, 1939-1940 -- The Suppressed Church: Ukrainian Catholics in the Soviet Union -- Muslim Religious Dissent in the U.S.S.R. -- Religious Dissent in the U.S.S.R.: Lithuanian Catholics.
Extrait:
Since the Bolshevik revolution of 1917, two of the most significant but at the same time least understood areas of that revolution's cultural impact have been philosophy and religion. The impact has of course been massive, not only in the Soviet Union but, after the second World War, in Soviet­ dominated Eastern Europe as well. Yet the consequences of Communism for philosophy and religion throughout the Soviet orbit are far from having the simplicity suggested by the stereotypes of a single, monolithic 'Marxism' and a consistent, crushing assault on the Church and on re­ ligious faith. Unquestionably Marxism is the ruling philosophy throughout Eastern Europe. In the Soviet Union, 'Marxism-Leninism' or 'dialectical ma­ terialism' is the official and the only tolerated philosophy, and most of the other countries of Eastern Europe follow the Soviet lead in philosophy as in other fields. But in the latter countries Marxism was imposed only after W orId War II, and its deVelopment has not always copied the Soviet model. Original thinkers in Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Hungary have thought their own way through the writings of Marx and his followers, and have arrived at Marxist positions which are consider­ ably at variance with the Soviet interpretations - and often with each other. Moreover in recent years the Soviet philosophers themselves have been unable to ignore the theoretical questions raised by the other East of Marxism in the West.
Auteur collectif ajouté:
Langue:
Anglais