Lexington Books
Pages: 398
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0330-2 • Hardback • April 2002 • $162.00 • (£125.00)
978-0-7391-0331-9 • Paperback • March 2002 • $64.99 • (£50.00)
Eugene Gogol received his Ph.D. from UCLA. He is currently teaching in Oregon.
Part 1 The Philosophic Foundation of the Other
Chapter 2 A Liberating, Negating Power of Other in the Hegelian Dialectic
Chapter 3 Latin American Philosophic Thought: Philosophies of Identity, History, and Liberation in Relation to the Hegelian Dialectic
Chapter 4 The Inseparability of Marx's Hegelianism and Humanism
Chapter 5 José Carlos Mariátegui: Striving to Recreate Marxism for Peru's Latin American Tierra
Chapter 6 Theology of Liberation's Incomplete Thought Drive into Marx's Humanism
Part 7 The Imprisonment of the Other: The Logic of Capitalism on Latin American Soil
Chapter 8 Economic Realities: Latin America's Veins Are Still Open - Capitalism's Present Day Behemoth of Neoliberalism
Chapter 9 Theoretic Foundations - Marx's "Economics" as Humanism and Philosophy
Chapter 10 Latin American Economic Theories
Chapter 11 The Theory of State-Capitalism and Latin America
Chapter 12 Notes on Nature in Latin America in Relation to a Concept of Nature in Marx
Part 13 Self-Liberation of the Other: Revolutionary Subjectivity in Latin America
Chapter 14 Comprehending the Zapatistas: Uniting the Force of Ideas with the Force of Arms
Chapter 15 Indigenous Struggles: Dimensions of Ethnicity, Class, and Gender; the Relation of Culture and Resistance
Chapter 16 The Coalescence of Class Struggles and Social Movements: Voices from the Other Mexico
Chapter 17 Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo: Raising a Banner of Freedom in Argentina
Chapter 18 Learning to Participate: The Experience of the MST (Landless Worker Movement) in Brazil
Chapter 19 Opening a Dialogue: Latin America's Revolutionary Subjectivity and the Thought of Marx
Part 20 The Revolutionary Other: In Organization, In Philosophy
Chapter 21 Organization and Philosophy: Two Kinds of Subjectivity; Two Kinds of Organization
This will be an important work for people interested in contemporary Latin American thought and new social movements, as well as to philosophers seeking to relate their reflections to social reality, in general. It is certainly a welcome contribution to a scandalously neglected area: Latin American philosophical production.
— Eduardo Mendieta, Professor of Philosophy, Pennsylvania State University
Gogol's work is a welcome reexamination of the relevance of Hegel and Marx for liberation, and it is a trenchant analysis of Latin American revolutionary thought as a necessary moment for human emancipation in a Hegelian-Marxist dialectic. The Concept of Other in Latin American Liberation is an important contribution for an understanding of Latin American philosophy.
— Mario Sáenz, Le Moyne College
This is a masterful study that interweaves Hegel's dialectic of negativity, Marx's humanism, and subjectivity in a strand of Latin American revolutionary thought together with case studies of social movements to create a Latin American philosophy of liberation. . . . It is an ambitious project in which Gogol is eager to engage intellectual trends of both the academic and organic kinds in order to chart a path toward liberation.
— Marc Becker, Truman State University; H-Latam
A useful and intelligent study of the dialogue between Marxism and revolutionary practice in Latin America today.
— James Petras, SUNY-Binghamton