Toggle navigation
Internationales Forschungszentrum
Kulturwissenschaften
Kunstuniversität Linz in Wien
Home
Kalender
Fellows
Blog
Calls
das ifk
Mission / Geschichte
Forschungsschwerpunkt
Kontakt / Team
Organisation
Veranstaltungen
ifk in Bildern
Impressum
ifk friends
Newsletter
Ausstellungen
Medien
Podcast
Books
- ifk Lectures & Translations
- Materialien
- Parabasen
- Schauplätze der Evidenz
Vortragsmitschnitte
Gastbeiträge
Clippings
Radio
Suche
DE
EN
To Top
Suche
Medien
ZURÜCK ZUR ÜBERSICHT
Vortragsmitschnitte
Michal Kopeček: Political Languages of Human Rights
Human rights as the political Grundbegriff of today's world are open to all possible political interpretations. The peaceful revolutions of 1989 in Central and Eastern Europe have been perceived, for good reason, as revolutions of human rights, which strengthened the legitimacy of Western-type liberal democracy and global neoliberal capitalism.
Dissidents are often seen as central to this triumph of liberalism. The lecture challenges these assumptions. The liberal human rights discourse was only marginal in East Central European dissent before 1989. We need to understand the fundamental plurality of political and cultural languages (socialist, liberal, republican, Christian, nationalist) of human rights among dissidents as an essential factor shaping political developments and the post-dissident politics of rights in the region after 1989. Understanding the historical complexity helps to understand some central aspects of political dynamics in the region, which have recently become one of the significant sites of culture wars and the global struggle over the democratic imagination in the Western world.
Share: