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Felsefede Marksist Olmak

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Felsefe hiçbir şekilde masum değildir. Bütün bu parlak ve ince düşüncelerin ufkunda beliren dünyası, onun reel dünyası, insanların ve kavgalarının dünyasıdır: sınıf mücadelesinin dünyası.

Felsefede Marksist Olmak, Althusser'in 1975'te kaleme aldığı 26 kısa bölümden ve Jean-François Revel'in polemik tarzı bir metnine cevaben yazdığı ek bir parçadan oluşuyor. Başlığın da yansıttığı üzere, tartışmanın merkezinde felsefe ile Marksizm arasındaki ilişki yer alıyor. Ara duraklarda ise Althusser'in başka metinlerinde de sıklıkla ele aldığı alt başlıklar; tarihsel gelişim çizgisi içinde felsefenin ne olduğu, bilgi-iktidar bağıntısı, idealist felsefenin yüzyıllardır süren tekeline karşı materyalist felsefeyi savunmanın gerekliliği, bir siyasal mücadele alanı olarak bilgi üretiminin tanımlanması, felsefecinin sınıf savaşı açısından önemi gibi can alıcı temalar var.

Filozof Olmayanlar İçin Felsefeye Giriş'teolduğu gibiFelsefede Marksist Olmak'ta da her zamanki ilgi çekici anlatımı, çarpıcı örnekleri, yer yer kışkırtıcı, şiddetli tartışmalara yol açan üslubuyla Althusser, kendi durduğu yerden “baş aşağı gözüken felsefeyi ayakları üzerine çevirmeyi” deniyor…

248 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 2015

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About the author

Louis Althusser

182 books517 followers
Louis Pierre Althusser (1918–1990) was one of the most influential Marxist philosophers of the 20th Century. As they seemed to offer a renewal of Marxist thought as well as to render Marxism philosophically respectable, the claims he advanced in the 1960s about Marxist philosophy were discussed and debated worldwide. Due to apparent reversals in his theoretical positions, to the ill-fated facts of his life, and to the historical fortunes of Marxism in the late twentieth century, this intense interest in Althusser's reading of Marx did not survive the 1970s. Despite the comparative indifference shown to his work as a whole after these events, the theory of ideology Althusser developed within it has been broadly deployed in the social sciences and humanities and has provided a foundation for much “post-Marxist” philosophy. In addition, aspects of Althusser's project have served as inspiration for Analytic Marxism as well as for Critical Realism. Though this influence is not always explicit, Althusser's work and that of his students continues to inform the research programs of literary studies, political philosophy, history, economics, and sociology. In addition, his autobiography has been subject to much critical attention over the last decade. At present, Althusser's philosophy as a whole is undergoing a critical reevaluation by scholars who have benefited from the anthologization of hard-to-find and previously unpublished texts and who have begun to engage with the great mass of writings that remain in his archives.

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5 stars
13 (27%)
4 stars
19 (39%)
3 stars
11 (22%)
2 stars
4 (8%)
1 star
1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Tara Brabazon.
Author 42 books529 followers
November 11, 2019
An inspirational book, for dark times. Althusser's dark times shape, shield and mock this book. This was the only 'complete' manuscript Althusser produced in the last decade of his life, after strangling his wife, Helene Rytmann, to death in 1980.

The book captures what Edward Said described as 'late style.' The thinking revealed in this book is the thinking of a master. The prose is playful and destructive in equal measure. His disappointments in 'objects,' knowledge, Marxism, philosophy and life are clearly sketched.

As I read this new edition from Bloomsbury, which is beautifully constructed, I realized how Althusser was shadowed by death in this last period. The book is 'about' Marxism, recognizing that Engels and Lenin bequeathed more to Marxist philosophy than Karl Marx. It is 'about' philosophy and the denial of the object, creating the space for science to focus on it. But more poignantly, it is a book of death. It reads life through the gauze of death. It reads thinking through the gauze of when thinking stops.

A provocative, confronting book, filled with darkness and regret, and ideas that may probably fail. It is a masterwork for Althusser's last decade. It is a rubric to interpret our present.

Profile Image for Ali.
92 reviews23 followers
September 29, 2018
Althusser'i okumak keyifli. Kitap gerçekten fikri açıdan ufuk açıcı ve dili de gayet güzel. Tabi bunun için belki de çevirmene teşekkür etmek isteniyor. Kitabı okurken en zorlandığım kısım ise, her ne kadar psikolojik sorunlarından kaynaklandığı yazılmış olsa da, karısını boğarak öldürmüş bir insanın kitabını okumak. Yazarın hayatını okumadan kitaba başlasaydım daha iyi olacaktı. Belki de o yüzden kitap hala elimde...
Profile Image for Andrew Noselli.
703 reviews79 followers
January 1, 2026
I think Althusser succumbed to the spiral staircase of madness due to his pursuit of what must be recognized as what is unobtainable in life, and in philosophy as well: the drive to affirm being through the negation of selfhood, or what we must in retrospect consider as a fairly dubious project, namely, that of demonstrating that Karl Marx, his hero, must be awarded a significant position as the thinker who sought the affection of his peers through the negation of the historical tradition of philosophy he inherited and sought to leave his mark on.  I consider such an endeavor, if and when it is pursued with the most venomous rigor, as my former colleague Ken Park once did, constitutes the ultimate break signifying the fatal step that true visionaries have the ill-favored prize awarded by fate, albeit with all the distinction and honors that history can convey.  To recapitulate, as an example of a thinker who, having detected the idealism in materialistic philosophy and the materialism in idealist philosophy, we may say that Althusser truly did succumb to what Sartre would have called a mind-wrenching philosophical vertigo that led him to strangle his wife, whom he writes about in his books, always suggesting the fear that he would experience if she were to ever leave him and that, as a solitary man, he would find himself confronted with the cold, agnostic structuralism that would become his milieu as a final parting goodbye.  Three stars.
Profile Image for Karlo Mikhail.
404 reviews132 followers
April 11, 2020
Dense but important intervention locating philosophy's ideological-political function and the need to make it serve the dominated classes in the class struggle.
Profile Image for A YOGAM.
1,933 reviews6 followers
December 17, 2025
Wenn Louis Althusser uns in 26 Kapiteln, deren einzelne Titel er uns vorenthält, mit „kristalliner Klarheit“ zeigt, wie man als Marxist die philosophische Spitzhacke schwingt, fühlt sich das an wie eine exklusive Einladung zum intellektuellen Klassenkampf – gemütlich vom Lehnstuhl aus. Man lernt hier nicht nur, wie man die Welt interpretiert, sondern auch, wie man sie mit „impeccabler Präzision“ so lange theoretisch bearbeitet, bis die ökonomische Obszönität der Gegenwart vor Scham im Boden versinkt. Dass er dabei Jean-François Revel charmant in die Schranken weist und jedem zutraut, sich selbst zu fragen, ob man eigentlich philosophieren kann, macht das Buch zum perfekten Handbuch für alle, die schon immer wissen wollten, wie man gleichzeitig elegant schreibt, das Kapital stürzt und dabei die philosophische Contenance wahrt. Ein unverzichtbares Training für den geistigen Widerstand, bei dem man zumindest auf dem Papier garantiert auf der richtigen Seite der Geschichte steht.
Profile Image for Tomás.
58 reviews5 followers
April 30, 2022
Uno puede no estar de acuerdo con Althusser en muchas cosas, pero hay cosas en las que, de plano, no tiene sentido llevarle la contraria. Aquí se esbozan algunas de las últimas, pero también de las primeras.
Profile Image for Alice Nilsson.
45 reviews19 followers
November 28, 2018
Idk if it was the translation or this thing is dense + painful to read in french but it was a trip.
8 reviews
December 22, 2019
Very very heavy in the philosophical jargon but had a lot of interesting concepts and ideas that helped to structure philosophy.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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