Provincialising Europe? Soviet Historiography of Philosophy and the Question of Eurocentrism

Journal title RIVISTA DI STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA
Author/s Kåre Johan Mjør
Publishing Year 2018 Issue 2018/2
Language English Pages 17 P. 277-293 File size 648 KB
DOI 10.3280/SF2018-002006
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The article explores the ways in which Soviet scholars wrote national histories of philosophy and how they justified their practice theoretically. Particular emphasis is put on the issue of Eurocentrism, which was a central target for Soviet historiography of philosophy. By means of examples from Soviet histories of Georgian (?Salva Nucubidze) and Russian philosophy (the History of Philosophy in the USSR; Galaktionov and Nikandrov’s Russian Philosophy), the author examines the tension between constructing national histories and combatting Eurocentrism in philosophy while remaining faithful to the universal Marxist scheme of philosophy’s past as a struggle between materialism and idealism. While in particular Hegel is repeatedly criticised for being Eurocentric, the Soviet practice is nevertheless dependent on his ideas of history and of history of philosophy. Thus, Europe, or the West, seems to represent the benchmark for what philosophy is, despite the intention to liberate national philosophies from it. The author suggests that such problems may be fruitfully approached by means of postcolonial perspectives.�

Keywords: History of philosophy, historiography, Marxism, postcolonialism, world philosophy

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Kåre Johan Mjør, Provincialising Europe? Soviet Historiography of Philosophy and the Question of Eurocentrism in "RIVISTA DI STORIA DELLA FILOSOFIA" 2/2018, pp 277-293, DOI: 10.3280/SF2018-002006