Althusser in Yugoslavia: On the Pre-History of the Ljubljana School of Philosophy
Thu, 2/15 · 4:30 pm—6:00 pm · 111 East Pyne
Gregor Moder, University of Ljubljana; Nick Nesbitt, French and Italian; Andrew Cole, English
Before Slavoj Žižek published The Sublime Object of Ideology in 1989—a work that marks his rise to international recognition—he was locally an already accomplished author of many books in the languages of Yugoslavia. This talk will discuss the wider context of social thought in Socialist Yugoslavia (1945-1991), beginning with the formation of a dissident, critical Marxist group gathered around the journal Praxis. The list of contributors to the journal reads as a Who’s Who in contemporary radical thought. However, there is one important omission: a text on ideology submitted by Louis Althusser was forcefully rejected by the journal editors. Why was Althusser’s theory of ideology so unbearable to the independent Marxist group Praxis as well as to the Party bureaucrats, not to mention the conservative circles pursuing Heideggerian phenomenology? It turns out that Althusser’s structuralist Marxism was properly studied and appreciated only in the emerging intellectual milieu of Ljubljana.