Ágnes Heller (1929–2019)
Autor von The Theory of Need in Marx
Über den Autor
Werke von Ágnes Heller
Das Leben ändern : radikale Bedürfnisse, Frauen und Utopie : Gespräche mit Ferdinando Adornato (1981) 10 Exemplare
Die Welt der Vorurteile: Geschichte und Grundlagen für Menschliches und Unmenschliches (Edition Konturen) (2014) 3 Exemplare
El péndulo de la modernidad : una lectura de la era moderna después de la caída del comunismo (1994) 3 Exemplare
La Revolucion de La Vida Cotidiana (Historia, Ciencia, Sociedad) (Spanish Edition) (1994) 2 Exemplare
Orbanismo: Il caso dell'Ungheria: dalla democrazia liberale alla tirannia (Eliche) (Italian Edition) (2019) 2 Exemplare
Una revision de la teoria de las necesidades / A Review of the Theory of Needs (Spanish Edition) (1996) 2 Exemplare
L'uomo del Rinascimento 1 Exemplar
Para mudar a vida 1 Exemplar
ラディカル・ユートピア―価値をめぐる議論の思想と方法 (りぶらりあ選書) 1 Exemplar
個人と共同体 (りぶらりお選書) INDIVIDUUM UND GEMEINSCHAFT 1 Exemplar
La vérité en politique 1 Exemplar
Sobre el pacifismo 1 Exemplar
On The New Adventures of the Dialectic* 1 Exemplar
Morale e rivoluzione 1 Exemplar
Toward a Marxist Theory of Value 1 Exemplar
The Question of Truth 1 Exemplar
Biopolitica e liberta' 1 Exemplar
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Wissenswertes
- Gebräuchlichste Namensform
- Heller, Ágnes
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Heller, Ágnes
- Geburtstag
- 1929-05-12
- Todestag
- 2019-07-19
- Geschlecht
- female
- Nationalität
- Hungary (birth)
- Geburtsort
- Budapest, Hungary
- Sterbeort
- Lake Balaton, Hungary
- Wohnorte
- Budapest, Hungary
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
New York, New York, USA - Ausbildung
- Eotvos Lorant University
University of Budapest - Berufe
- philosopher
academic - Beziehungen
- Fehér, Ferenc (husband)
Lukács, George (colleague)
Ligeti, György (cousin) - Organisationen
- La Trobe University (Melbourne, Australia)
Eotvos Lorant University
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Free University of Berlin
New School for Social Research - Preise und Auszeichnungen
- Wallenberg Medal (2014)
- Kurzbiographie
- Ágnes Heller was born in Budapest, Hungary into a Jewish family of Austrian descent. During World War II, her father, a musician and writer, helped people flee the Nazis until he was deported and murdered in Auschwitz. Ágnes originally enrolled in the medical school at the University of Budapest, but changed her focus to philosophy after attending a lecture by György (George) Lukács, the most influential philosopher and critic of that era. She became Lukács’ aide in 1947 and joined the Communist Party. Together with a group of philosophers gathered around Lukács, Ágnes founded the "Budapest School" of thought. She and others became targets of the pro-Soviet Hungarian Communist Party, which reacted violently to any attempt at critical re-evaluation of Marx. Ágnes was expelled from the Party in 1949, and demoted
from the university along with Lukács, and spent many years teaching high school, banned from publishing. In 1968, after she protested against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, she faced new political repression. In 1977, she was permitted to emigrate to Australia with her husband Ferenc Fehér, Four years later, she was invited to teach political philosophy at the New School for Social Research in New York City. In the USA, she became a famous philosopher and was academically and politically active around the world.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, she returned to her native Hungary, where she was appointed a member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. In 1995, she received the Szechenyi National Prize in Hungary and went on to receive international honors such as the Hannah Arendt Prize, the 2010 Goethe Medal, and the Concordia Prize in Vienna. She wrote or contributed to nearly three dozen books, beginning with Towards a Marxist Theory of Value, published in 1972. She was one of the strongest critics of the Hungarian nationalist government of Viktor Orbán.
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