Luis J. Pedrazuela is currently a research fellow at the University of Leeds.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Alexandre Koj?ve is well known for having introduced a whole generation of French philosophers to an existentialist version of Hegel's system. One of the great merits of the collection of essays gathered by Luis J. Pedrazuela is to highlight the breadth of Koj?ve's work besides his lectures on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit. The contributions to this collective book draw attention to other important writings by Koj?ve such as his Notion of Authority and his Outline of a Phenomenology of Right. They enrich our understanding of the philosophical Twentieth Century by placing these works in the context of Koj?ve's exchanges and correspondence with some of his contemporaries, particularly Leo Strauss and Carl Schmitt. --Vincent Descombes, ?cole des Hautes ?tudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris For this edited volume on the oeuvre of French philosopher Alexandre Koj?ve, Pedrazuela solicited the work of a truly international group of scholars. The book excels in bringing together the most up-to-date research on Koj?ve's work in general and his lesser known or recently published texts in particular, such as his writings on art, an unpublished and almost indecipherable 1,000-page manuscript in Russian, and his memorandums for the French Ministry of the Economy.... The essays implicitly raise further research questions, such as Koj?ve's relationships to Heidegger, the American idea, psychoanalysis, and contemporary art. Though this volume, apart from the excellent essay on Koj?ve and Strauss, is not for novice readers, it is highly recommended for anyone seeking to begin research on Alexandre Koj?ve. Highly recommended. Graduate students and faculty. -- "Choice Reviews" These articles on Alexandre Koj?ve range from the relation of his thought to other thinkers (Hegel, Marx, Strauss, Schmitt, Lacan) to his understanding of the deepest roots of political life (authority, and right or justice); from his practical concerns with economic issues whose resolution could help lead (via European integration) in the direction of a peaceful global order to the character of art toward the end of its historical development. The collection testifies to scholars' ongoing fruitful fascination with this brilliant, paradoxical, and profound philosopher. --James H. Nichols Jr., Claremont McKenna College This is a stimulating collection that sheds new light on Koj?ve's thought and activity. The contributions do justice to the remarkable range and continued relevance of the enigmatic figure. --Svetozar Minkov, Roosevelt University This is a wide-ranging, informative, and provocative collection of essays, well organized and integrated so as to shed much needed light on the thought of the greatest Hegelian of the twentieth century. --Thomas L. Pangle, University of Texas at Austin