Res Publica |
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Article | Cold-War ideology: an apologetics for global ethnic conflict? |
Authors | Robert C. Trundle |
DOI | 10.5553/RP/048647001996038001049 |
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Robert C. Trundle, "Cold-War ideology: an apologetics for global ethnic conflict?", Res Publica, 1, (1996):49-72
Kant had a notion of our determined and freely-choosing behavior which illuminates basic assumptions of contemporary ideologies. A myopic embracement of only one or the other behavior has been superseded by a new entanglement which renders moot ordinary political classifications. Fascism had typically affirmed the radical freedom of an Uebermensch (Superman) as well as a superior race and racism; Marxist communism a radical determinism as well as inevitable class warfare. But during the Cold War, especially since the 1960s, there arose in open societies a virulent assimilation of the two ideologies. Understood as a species of the"New Left", the ideology has effectively combined name-calling ad hominem attacks of "racism" with"elite white classes" to politicize dialogue and to suppress objective pursuits of truth as well as to foster ethnic identity and provide an unprecedented apologetics for global conflict. |