Aliénation et désaliénation : une confrontation Lukács-Heidegger
Nicolas Tertulian
It is generally agreed that the major contribution of Lukács to twentieth century thought is to have
foregrounded in philosophical inquiry the questions of alienation and reification. However, while the
secondary literature on the question has been almost exclusively focused on Lukács's early work, History
and Class Consciousness, the present article addresses the wealth of innovative perspectives to be found in
his Aesthetics, and in particular in his Ontology of Social Being. The second part of the article addresses the
affinities with the Sartrean philosophy and proposes a confrontation with the Heideggerrian analysis of
alienation, which is rarely granted a critical treatment in its own rights.
• Le fourvoiement des « disciples »
• Le novum de l’Esthétique et de l’Ontologie
• Une phénoménologie de la subjectivité
• Sartre et Merleau-Ponty : l’impact de Lukács
• Aliénation et sortie de l’aliénation chez Heidegger : une issue de
tous les dangers