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30.12.2008
Homi K. Bhabha, E. Efe Çakmak

Forget Europe!

An interview with Homi Bhabha

For journals, Europe as a concept is worthwhile only if conceived of as a threshold to be surpassed, Homi Bhabha argues in interview with Emrah Efe Çacmak. Their work is per se internationalist and has to link communities of intellectuals and activists around the world. [ more ]

30.12.2008
E. Efe Çakmak, Mark C. Taylor

Forget journals!

22.12.2008
Jens Hacke

Feelings of community

19.12.2008
Karl Schlögel

Places and strata of memory

18.12.2008
André Orléan

Beyond transparency


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Arena | 6/2008

Efter kapitalismen [After capitalism]

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16.12.2008
Eurozine Review

Secular noise reduced to a whisper

"Index on Censorship" investigates what Bush-Cheney did to civil liberties; "Esprit" welcomes America's first Chicagoan president; "Arena" asks whether there will be a Left after capitalism; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Oslo) writes Bush's epitaph; "Samtiden" scrutinizes racism in Norway; "Dilema veche" calls for a debate on anti-Semitism in Romania; "Osteuropa" weighs up causes and effects of the Georgian war; "Le Monde diplomatique" (Berlin) reports on parallel realities in Israel; and "Magyar Lettre Internationale" prefers literary canons in the plural.

02.12.2008
Eurozine Review

The gothic way

18.11.2008
Eurozine Review

The malady of infinite aspiration

04.11.2008
Eurozine Review

Neither man nor woman nor dog nor cat

21.10.2008
Eurozine Review

The greed of others



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Authors

Ramin Jahanbegloo

was born in Tehran, Iran, and received his PhD in philosophy from the Sorbonne. He is the author of 20 books, including Conversations with Isaiah Berlin (1991), Gandhi: aux sources de la non-violence (1998), and Iran: Between Tradition and Modernity (ed.) (2004). Also a citizen of Canada, Jahanbegloo taught in Toronto, Delhi, and Tehran; he has been responsble for bringing scores of prominent Western intellectuals to Iran, including Jürgen Habermas, Richard Rorty, Noam Chomsky, Toni Negri, and Edward Said.

In April 2006 Jahanbegloo was arrested in Tehran on charges of spying. On his release in August he made a public statement in which he admitted acting in the interests of Western bodies seeking to prepare the ground for a "velvet revolution" in Iran and announced his withdrawal from the international intellectual stage. His admission is widely understood to have been the result of pressure from the authorities incuding the bail condition of family property.

For more information, see Jahanbegloo's website.



Eurozine Articles


Ramin Jahanbegloo, Danny Postel

Ideas whose time has come

A conversation with Iranian philosopher Ramin Jahanbegloo

"For me as an Iranian philosopher, thinking differently is a form of going beyond the challenges of my daily life in Iran. It's an opening up to the world which goes hand in hand with the act of being free." [more]

06.10.2006


Ramin Jahanbegloo

Beyond the clash of intolerances

Today, we are not experiencing a clash of civilizations, but a clash of intolerances. "We must encourage opposing forces to adhere to values of moderation, tolerance, and non-violence", says the Iranian philosopher. [more]

19.05.2006



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