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Human Rights and Republicanism in Central European Dissent, 1968-1989

Human Rights and Republicanism in Central European Dissent, 1968-1989
Hochgeladen von: IWM Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen
Quelle: Klaus Ranger

To speak of dissident republicanism in Central and Eastern Europe is not self-evident. No dissident identified with the political tradition of republican liberty rediscovered in the West in the 1970s. Yet, scholars detected the political language of republicanism in the democratic opposition very early on, finding within it an explanation for the unique character of dissident political philosophy and self-organizing civil society practice.

These interpretations have never prevailed in research. While the anti-communist democratic opposition cannot be interpreted through one or two ideological traditions, this presentation will attempt to develop and refine existing republican interpretations by focusing on the presence of republican motives in the dissident understanding of human rights. Whereas the socialist and liberal conceptions of human rights had their theoreticians and defenders among dissidents, the republican understanding of human rights (as participatory rights) in dissent was implicit but widely present.

Michal Kope?ek argues that the republican language of human rights (and the related concept of freedom) was not only one of the available human rights languages next to socialist, liberal, Christian, or nationalist but quite a prominent one. Kope?ek will elaborate his arguments based on concrete examples of prominent dissident thinkers Jan Pato?ka, Václav Havel, Jacek Kuro?, and Ágnes Heller.

Michal Kope?ek, is Head of the Department of Ideas and Concepts at the Institute of Contemporary History, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, and former Co-Director of Imre Kertész Kolleg, Friedrich Schiller University in Jena. His research is focused on the comparative modern intellectual history of East Central Europe, nationalism, the history of communist dictatorship and post-socialism in Eastern Europe. Among his recent publications are co-authored Czechoslovakism (Routledge 2022), Architects of Long-Systemic Change: Expert Roots of Post-Socialism in Czechoslovakia (in Czech, Prague 2019) and the multi-volume A History of Modern Political Thought in East Central Europe (Oxford University Press 2016; 2018). He is finishing a monograph on the Legacy of Dissidence in East Central Europe 1970s-2000s, focusing on dissident political and legal thought and practices.

Misha Glenny, Rector of the IWM, will introduce the speaker and moderate the ensuing Q&A with the audience.

Empfiehl Human Rights and Republicanism in Central European Dissent, 1968-1989, IWM, Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen deinen Freunden per E-Mail.

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Die Veranstaltung "Human Rights and Republicanism in Central European Dissent, 1968-1989" wurde am Dienstag, 13. Februar 2024 von IWM Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen im openeventnetwork eingetragen.
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Human Rights and Republicanism in Central European Dissent, 1968-1989, Dienstag, 20. Februar 2024, IWM, Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen