Traditionalism and Sociology-The Figure of the Radical Subjetc - Part 3-4
French school ethnosociology. Classics of sociology. Structural Anthropology.
Content:
English school. Classical evolutionism. Social anthropology. Studies of Nation.
Contents:
American School ethnosociology. Cultural anthropology. History of religions. Ethnomethodology.
Content:
German School ethnosociology. Cultural circles. Ethnopsychology
Basic definitions, the terms, the paradigms, the synchronicity and diachronicity of analysis -- the structure of pres
French war on Libya: a dissonant point of view (Alexandre Latsa)
Mark Sleboda. ‘MONSTERS TO DESTROY’
When asked to contribute to this series on the future of conservatism, I hesitated because it seemed to me that in both the US and Europe what was most needed was not a new form of conservatism but rather a reinvention of the left. For more than a generation we have been under the sway of conservative ideas, against which there has been little serious competition. In the wake of the financial crisis and the rise of massive inequality, there should be an upsurge of leftwing populism, and yet some of the most energised populists both in the US and Europe are on the right. There are many reasons for this, but one of them is surely that publics around the world have very little confidence that the left has any credible solutions to our current problems.
The rise of the French Socialists and Syriza in Greece does not belie this fact; both are throwbacks to an old and exhausted left that will sooner rather than later have to confront the dire fiscal situation of their societies. What we need is a left that can stem the loss of rich-world middle class jobs and incomes through forms of redistribution that do not undermine economic growth.
The video with English subtittles.
The fall of the Berlin Wall was a tragedy for the Soviet world, it was the collapse of the system established by the Yalta Peace Agreemen
Alexander Dugin talks about the need for Russia to build a contemporary, distinctly-Russian school of philosophy from the ground up, ther
In this introductory segment, Alexander Dugin sets forth the general philosophy that will govern all of his arguments in this series: tha
About Postmodernity, the West, the orthodox identity and the Russian society.
Alexander Dugin talks about Russia's need for a new historical paradigm--one distinct from the Marxist prism used during Soviet times
The video with English subtitles.
The Dugin's speech Russian/English.
The international conference Against Post-Modern World (Moscow 2011). Opening session.
Dugin speaks in English about Georgian agression against Southern Ossetia.