Abstract

The founders of Krisis saw their journal as part of Rudi Dutschke’s ‘long march through the institutions’: a philosophical journal that would criticize and change the practices and institutions of academic philosophy from within. Philosophy should play a critical and emancipatory role in society and in intellectual and public debates, and the journal could help to enhance that role. Academic philosophy did change, but in a rather different direction: new public management took over and submitted academic research and education to a new regime of entrepeneurial efficiency and disciplinary competition. To survive, Krisis metamorphosized several times and is now a broad bilingual online journal for intellectual debate and research with a loose relationship with academic philosophy. If it strengthens this identity, it can continue to play an intermediary role between academic research and public debate, in both directions

Highlights

  • The founders of Krisis saw their journal as part of Rudi Dutschke’s ‘long march through the institutions’: a philosophical journal that would criticize and change the practices and institutions of academic philosophy from within

  • Krisis metamorphosized several times and is a broad bilingual online journal for intellectual debate and research with a loose relationship with academic philosophy. If it strengthens this identity, it can continue to play an intermediary role between academic research and public debate, in both directions

  • Een dergelijk beeld roept haast onvermijdelijk een andere metafoor op, namelijk die van het verschil tussen een bewegingsoorlog en een stellingenoorlog, een verschil dat de Italiaanse marxist Antonio Gramsci in de jaren dertig gebruikte om zijn hegemonieconcept nader te duiden: anders dan in het leninistische begrip van de communistische revolutie gaat het in de strijd om de politieke macht niet zozeer om een eenmalige, gewelddadige bestorming van de Bastille of het Winterpaleis, maar om een veel geleidelijker proces waarin geweld of dwang veel minder centraal staan en het winnen van de hearts and minds een cruciale factor is in het verwerven van de hegemonie

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Summary

Introduction

The founders of Krisis saw their journal as part of Rudi Dutschke’s ‘long march through the institutions’: a philosophical journal that would criticize and change the practices and institutions of academic philosophy from within.

Results
Conclusion

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