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  1. Elements of a strategy of collective action.Laurie E. Adkin - 1998 - In Roger Keil (ed.), Political ecology: global and local. New York: Routledge. pp. 285.
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  • No inner remigration: Martin Heidegger, Ernst jünger, and the early federal republic of germany: Daniel morat.Daniel Morat - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (3):661-679.
    Martin Heidegger and Ernst Jünger rightly count among the signal examples of intellectual complicity with National Socialism. But after supporting the National Socialist movement in its early years, they both withdrew from political activism during the 1930s and considered themselves to be in “inner emigration” thereafter. How did they react to the end of National Socialism, to the Allied occupation and finally to the foundation of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1949? Did they abandon their stance of seclusion and (...)
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  • The phenomenology of utopia: reimagining the political.Mark Bahnisch - unknown
    This thesis argues that the end of Soviet Marxism and a bipolar global political imaginary at the dissolution of the short Twentieth Century poses an obstacle for anti-systemic political action. Such a blockage of alternate political imaginaries can be discerned by reading the work of Francis Fukuyama and "Endism" as performative invocations of the closure of political alternatives, and thus as an ideological proclamation which enables and constrains forms of social action. It is contended that the search through dialectical thought (...)
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  • The Sense of a Vacuum.Adam Tooze - 2014 - Historical Materialism 22 (3-4):351-370.
    In response to the discussants this essay placesWages of Destructionin its historiographical context. In dialogue with Riley’s call for a reading of Nazi Germany in terms of a theory of imperialism, it calls for an account of the ‘variable geometry’ of regime-business relations. In conclusion, however, we must insist on the ‘vacuum’ of causal logic that is a defining characteristic of the history of the Nazi regime.
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