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Pessimism and the Revolutions of 1848

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

Historians have long argued that an intimate connection exists between the failure of Europe's liberal and, in France at least, radical agitation of 1848 and the spread of pessimistic values during the following two decades. György Lukacs, in The Destruction of Reason, has treated this point at some length. He ascribes the rising popularity throughout the 1850's of Arthur Schopenhauer, the most systematic and erudite interpreter of pessimistic thought, to “a purely bourgeois form of irrationalism.” The defeat of the revolutions of 1848 had left many Germans politically frustrated. What resulted was an “ideologically altered situation” in which Schopenhauer “suddenly grew famous and supplanted Feuerbach as the ideological leader of the (German) bourgeoisie.” Moreover, French capitalists, frightened by the workers' revolt that took place in Paris during June, 1848, helped to give pessimism its “international effect.” Indeed they knew its world despair for what it actually was, “an indirect apology” for their own economic interests.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1973

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References

1 Lukacs, György, Werke (Berlin, 1962), IX, 172Google Scholar. Lukacs' use of “irrational” to describe almost all post-Hegelian, non-Marxist German thought, seems often to be as ritualistic and self-defensive as the medieval Church's reference to the “stiff-necked Jews.”

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