Five-year plan of philosophy: Stalinism after Kojève, Hegel after Stalinism

Studies in East European Thought 65 (3-4):243-258 (2013)
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Abstract

The aporia inherent in Kojève’s discussion of the end of history stems from the temporality implicit in the moment of inscribing the end of history in philosophy. Hegel’s Phenomenology as the unfolding of absolute knowledge stands at the last moment in history, without necessarily constituting its end. Reading the post-NEP Soviet ideology through Kojève demonstrates that the doctrine of “socialism in one country” similarly situates itself outside historical time as history’s last moment, marked by the coincidence of being and concept, the disappearance of negation, and classless society without an historical agent. In the reconceptualization of labor in Stalinist ideology as a temporalization of being without negation, the representation of time in five-year plans radically reinvents temporality as a suspension of history in the perpetual deferral of its end. Going beyond Kojève, the immanent logic of temporality of five-year plans enables a non-teleological reading of Hegelian philosophy with regard to the status of its method and the function of the end of history.

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References found in this work

Phenomenology of Spirit.Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - 1977 - Oxford: Oxford University Press. Edited by Arnold V. Miller & J. N. Findlay.
Phenomenology of Spirit.G. W. F. Hegel & A. V. Miller - 1977 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 10 (4):268-271.
Introduction to the reading of Hegel: lectures on the phenomenology of spirit.Alexandre Kojève - 1969 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. Edited by Raymond Queneau.
Hegel or Spinoza.Pierre Macherey - 1979 - Paris: Univ of Minnesota Press.
An atheism that is not humanist emerges in French thought.Stefanos Geroulanos - 2010 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.

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