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Erik Martin
Michał Mrugalski
Associate Professor of Literary Theory at Warsaw University and DAAD Guest Lecturer at the Department for Slavic Studies, University of Tübingen. Columnist, literary critic, he is currently working on a book about theories of tragedy as praxeology in Germany and Poland, on two anthologies of Polish literary theory and on two collective volumes about Polish theory and the interconnections of literary theory with other scholarly disciplines.
Patrick Flack
Senior Lecturer in history of ideas of Central and Eastern Europe at the University of Fribourg since 2021. He studied Russian, philosophy and history in Geneva, Berlin and Moscow, before obtaining a PhD from Charles University in Prague (2011). He was then a SNF post-doc researcher at the Central-European Institute of Philosophy (Prague), the Peter-Szondi Institute (Berlin) and the Husserl Archives (Leuven). In 2012, he founded sdvig press, an open access digital publishing platform, which runs the international project Open Commons of Phenomenology
The present volume, which constitutes the proceedings of the eponymous conference held in May 2019 at the Polish Institute in Berlin, offers a series of detailed insights into the profoundly networked forms and practices of Neo-Kantian philosophy. Although far from exhaustive, the materials and perspectives gathered here establish beyond doubt that the scope and impact of Neo-Kantianism in the landscape of European culture and ideas can only ever be properly understood if one takes into account not just its main German “schools” (Marburg, Baden) but also its inter-disciplinary and cross-cultural dissemination in other contexts, not least in Poland and Russia. Conversely, this volume also underscores how the broad and diverse influence exerted by Neo-Kantian philosophy in its relatively long period of dominance constitutes a crucial element in the dynamics and evolution of European ideas and intellectual cultures, in particular the fundamental methodological break with the positivist traditions of the 19th century and the slow rise of “new” human sciences or Geisteswissenschaften (anthropology, cultural-historical psychology, linguistics, literary theory, sociology, cultural studies) around 1900.
Flack Patrick; Martin Erik; Mrugalski Michał
Soboleva Maja
Gniazdowski Andrzej
Kubalica Tomasz
Zehnder Christian
Zagirnyak Mikhail
Mrugalski Michał
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