For Neoclassical Tragedy: György Lukács's Drama Book
Studies in East European Thought 60 (1/2):45 - 54 (2008)
| Abstract | Before he joined the Communist Party, the young György Lukács published an outstanding history of the modern drama in which he combined sociological analysis with aesthetic judgment. By doing so he called his countrymen's attention to a new and insightful approach to the study of literature. At the same time, he made a strong case for the superiority of neoclassical tragedy—largely inspired by personal experience | |||||||||
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György Lukács (1980/1981). The Destruction of Reason. Humanities Press.
György Lukacs (1975). The Young Hegel: Studies in the Relations Between Dialectics and Economics. Merlin Press.
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche (1974). The Birth of Tragedy; or, Hellenism and Pessimism. Gordon Press.
Joseph Westfall (2003). Nietzsche and the Approach of Tragedy. International Philosophical Quarterly 43 (3):333-350.
György Lukács (1986). Georg Lukács: Selected Correspondence, 1902-1920: Dialogues with Weber, Simmel, Buber, Mannheim, and Others. Columbia University Press.
Sandor Kariko (2007). Georg Lukács's Labour-Conception. The Proceedings of the Twenty-First World Congress of Philosophy 11:31-36.
Ferenc L. Lendvai (2008). György Lukács 1902–1918: His Way to Marx. Studies in East European Thought 60 (1-2):55 - 73.
Annette T. Rubinstein & Gyorgy Lukács (1984). Three Red Letter Days: Interviews with Gyorgy Lukács. Science and Society 48 (3):344 - 349.
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