Fascism as a recurring possibility: Zeev Sternhell, the anti-Enlightenment, and the intellectual history of European modernity
In: History of European ideas, Band 49, Heft 5, S. 854-869
ISSN: 0191-6599
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In: History of European ideas, Band 49, Heft 5, S. 854-869
ISSN: 0191-6599
Defence date: 9 January 2015 ; Examining Board: Professor Martin van Gelderen, European University Institute /Lichtenberg Kolleg, Universität Göttingen (Supervisor) Professor Laura Lee Downs, European University Institute Professor Gareth Stedman Jones, University of Cambridge Professor Nadia Urbinati, Columbia University, New York. ; Against an established but substantially mistaken consensus, this intellectual biography suggests that a contextually informed reading of Sorel's work invalidates both the supposedly 'irrationalist' character of his theoretical elaboration and the interpretation of his syndicalism as a theory of insurrection for insurrections' sake.This is done by showing that Sorel's understanding of historical materialism was decisively shaped by epistemological questions on science, determinism, and freedom that characterized the French philosophical debate in the 1880s and 1890s. The inability of the dominant understanding of science to make room for human agency in history brought Sorel to remove both historical and economic determinism from his revision of Marxism and led him, through his readings of Vico and Labriola, to understand the social world in terms of collective agency embedded in changing institutions rather than as a set of phenomena connected by deterministic causal relations. This resulted in an understanding of the socialist transformation as a longue durée process of proletarian institutional evolution and led Sorel to see in existing proletarian institutions, most notably unions, the seeds of the society of tomorrow.As Sorel, after 1900, focussed on the more empirical question of how to ensure the progress of existing working class institutions, he became aware of living in an era characterized by a process of assimilation of European working classes into national frameworks. He understood, like Bernstein, that the increasing interdependency between national states and capital hampered the revolutionary potential of proletarian institutions. Unlike Bernstein, however, he refused to abandon the revolutionary ambitions that he thought were essential to Marxism. Thus, he dedicated his most important works, most notably the Reflections on violence, to the questions of class identity and class formation.Instead of the 'pessimist moaning for blood' described by G.D.H. Cole, Sorel emerges, philosophically, as an epistemologist concerned with human agency and with its essential historicity, and historically, as a Marxist who perceptively understood the challenges that a changing capitalism posed to the revolutionary perspective outlined by Marx.
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In: Mil neuf cent: revue d'histoire intellectuelle, Band 32, Heft 1, S. 93
ISSN: 1960-6648
In: History of political thought, Band 33, Heft 4, S. 733-737
ISSN: 0143-781X
In: Modern intellectual history: MIH, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 103-132
ISSN: 1479-2451
The article examines T. E. Hulme's reading of Georges Sorel as a politically transversal thinker of moral renewal. It argues that, by distancing Sorel from syndicalism and by reading him as a thinker of moral absolutes, this interpretation constituted an act of resignification. This is shown by contrasting Hulme's reading with the dominant patterns of the British reception of Sorel. What emerges is the striking, and self-aware, originality of Hulme's positions. This originality, we argue, was made possible by the European scope of Hulme's intellectual horizon, which gave him the resources to read Sorel differently. Finally, we ask why Hulme read Sorel in this way. We suggest that Hulme was working through a contradiction between his relativistic philosophical education and an increasing need for political commitment. Sorel's ethics of commitment grounded in myth were a way to move from Bergsonian openness to a metaphysics capable of conceptualizing moral and political absolutes.
In: Radboud Studies in Humanities volume10
Introduction: Georges Sorel's Study on Vico in French and European Context -- 1 The Early Years of Georges Sorel -- 2 The Epistemology of the Social Sciences -- 3 French Marxism in the 1890s -- 4 Italian Connections -- 5 The "Politics" of the Institution -- 6 Violence and Myth -- 7 Beyond Syndicalism -- 8 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Note on the Text and Translation -- Study on Vico -- Annotations -- Texts Cited or Quoted in the "Étude sur Vico" -- Modern Editions Cited in the Translation -- Index.
In: Palgrave Macmillan studies in banking and financial institutions
This book introduces the fundamentals of retail credit risk management, provides a broad and applied investigation of the related modeling theory and methods, and explores the interconnections of risk management with other firm operations and industry regulation. The focus on retail (private individuals and small-medium enterprises) and the constant reference to the implications of the financial crisis for credit risk management, make the book distinctive. Furthermore, the involvement of academics, regulators and professionals from major global banks and consulting firms provides a global focus on the right balance between theory and applications. This book is aimed at MBA/Executive students who are planning to move into a career in professional credit risk management, and for professional risk managers looking for quantitative and updated methods of measurement and management in the area of retail credit risk.
In: Cahiers Jaurès, Band 250, Heft 4, S. 81-114