ISBN-13: 9781032237152 / Angielski / Miękka / 2021 / 342 str.
ISBN-13: 9781032237152 / Angielski / Miękka / 2021 / 342 str.
The book explores the intellectual history of Bulgaria between the 1960s and the 1980s at the intersections of the country's social and political history.
Introduction: On this Book's Nature and Objectives
1. Siezing power and Institutionalization of “The New Socialist Science”
Purging the university
De-Stalinisation and swift re-Stalinisation in the university
2. The Zhelyu Zhelev case: Sinning Against Faith and the Party Themis
Claiming subjectivity through individual Action: eventual subjectivity
How to use the topsy-turvy political speak
Types of party discourses – Of the prosecution, of the defence and of the defendant
Radical honesty or venal pragmatism?
Structure and event in a post-Stalinist society
Theoretical Outcomes (1): A Sense of Community Awakens – Small Goups of Civic Engagement
3. The Ivan Slavov Case: Between the Threat of Social Exclusion and the Moral Sanction of the Group
A pamphletist versus communist logomorphia
Private life as pretext for political blackmail
“The betrayal” as a private drama and test for the group’s integrity
The excommunication from the group as a loss of identity
Theoretical Outcomes (2): On Actions Committed under Duress and amidst Severe Freedom Shortage
4. The Nikolay Genchev case: Against Historiography as the Chambermaid of Politics or Life in Two Parallel Worlds
Broadening the solidarity field
The early Nikolay Genchev and the history of the Algerian Revolution
For a national – rather than class – history: A critique of official historiography
A personal story morphing into social history: Tearing apart and sewing together of the physical author and his ideas
New challenges: Initiating the debate on Bulgaria’s political system between the two World Wars
Changes in the intentional background of action. Nikolay Genchev: the "double contingency" principle
The dual use of the primary party organisation. Nikolay Genchev, an expert in the guerrilla warfare in the jungle of the party's chain of command
5. The Zhelyu Zhelev Case (continued): Between Truth and Authority – Creation of “The Revisionists”
Attempts at a philosophical position in the context of modern times
The artfulness of a small man in the battle for survival
Zhelyu Zhelev, the Postgraduate Student and Todor Pavlov, the Academician
Samizdat within the bounds of legality. The scandal – a publicity strategy in a closed system
The contrivance of scientific facts through text-substituting “translations”
The informal public sphere – how it functions?
A purging trend at the Philosophy Faculty
From criticising leading to wrenching Lenin out of the dogmatic stranglehold: The generational discourse as political speak in disguise
Theoretical Outcomes (3): “Letters to the Chief” as a Genre – Social Communication in a Closed, Overcentralised Society
6. The Assen Ignatov Case: Beyond the Limits of the Officially Regulated Knowledge – Philosophy as a Way to Deliberate on the Human Condition
A diagnosis of dogmatic thinking
The witch-hunt season is open
A basic programme for the development of social science. Alienation under socialism.
The party tribunal against Assen Ignatov: Timid solidarity and loose ties within "the group"
Biographies falling apart: Living in the lie and through the lie
Sketching out a reformist agenda
Intelligentsia and the Party bureaucracy
A surprising deliverance: the deus ex machina and the ambivalence of the "pardoning from above"
"Philosophy in action": a critique of the "asymmetrical relations" in the education model
The end of a long administrative assassination
"Disarmament" and "self-criticism": key concepts in the discourse of power
A Bulgarian reception of Heidegger and ways of utilising the philosopher
Heidegger's deconstruction as a way to experience one's own existential situation: Designing a "project" for oneself
A play between the truth of historical facts and the "logic of history"
Baiting the other side: State Security and the philosopher
Redemption and its price
Theoretical Outcomes (4): The Correlation between Coercion and Free Action in a Totalitarian State
7. The Isak Passy Case: The Separation of Political and Intellectual Power – Theory and Information Breakthrough
On the tragedy of a crushed ideal
Facts against the dogmatist's theoretical superstition
The philosophers’ enlightenment surge: A quest for the educational and moral fundamentals of young people
Altering the whole intellectual context: “destruction through creation”
Theoretical Outcomes (5): Academic Paradigm and Community amid the One-party Dictatorship
8. From Zhelyu Zhelev Case to the Case of 'Fascism' Anatomy of a Chain of Incidents
Fascism: A dissection of the totalitarian phenomenon and the semantic challenges of a book with a key
From a manuscript titled, The Totalitarian State, to Fascism: on the collective authorship of an incident
"Constitutional fiction" and its use
The arraignment of the "ideological prosecution": formalism and lack of zeal
Fissures in Censorship: Penalties for "blunted vigilance" and "political myopia"
A split between the party commanding heights and the grassroots: The primary party organisation – one possible pocket of resistance
9. The Dobrin Spassov Case: A Clash between the Rejection of Totalitarian Practices and the Commitment to Social Utopia
Alien among his own or the testing of loyalty
Hamstrung innovation
Dobrin Spassov stepping into Todor Pavlov's boots: Efforts to overcome the "intense backwardness" of Bulgarian philosophy
The debate on totalitarianism and the changes in the structure of the scientific (philosophical) field
The emergence of an alternative assessment centre of academic relevance and civil conduct
The contradiction between the regime's nature and the principles of civil conduct
10. The Ilcho Dimitrov Case: In Search of a Win-Win Game within the System – The Public Communications Craftsman
Questioning the simplistic propaganda version of Bulgarian history between the two World Wars
Ilcho Dimitrov and Todor Pavlov: historical facts against class-and-party fitness for purpose
The intellectuals' quest to positions of power: The relationship between the power of force and the power of knowledge
The in-out existence in two different social environments: The inexorable logic of symbolic capital exchange
The inner workings of big power: How can academic and political attitudes part ways
"Paris is worth a mass": Clashes between the state administration and the party apparatus
The horizon of reformist thinking and action
Theoretical Outcomes (6): Specifics of Social Criticism in Totalitarian Society – Social Criticism and Social Change
Conclusion: From the Big Event to the Incidents: A Reconstruction of the Event(ual) Identity of Historical Change
Abbreviations
Literature and archival sources
Ivaylo Znepolski is the Director of the Institute for the Study of the Recent Past in Sofia, Professor at Sofia University, Bulgaria, Visiting Professor at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris (1994–2002), former culture minister (1993–1995), and an author of numerous books and edited volumes on the recent communist past of Bulgarian and Eastern Europe.
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa