The seminars at the Columbia University Centre for Contemporary Critical Thought organised by Bernard Harcourt continue with Hegel 13/13. I was able to go to several of the Marx 13/13 series earlier this year, and the larger events are usually live-streamed for those not in New York (or Paris, where some are held).
Here’s part of the description for the Hegel series:
Hegel 13/13 is a multi-year project that explores the historical confrontations with G.W.F. Hegel’s thought, from the nineteenth century to the present, with the aim of developing new critical perspectives and practices for today’s times.
The ambition of this multi-year project is to serve as a catalyst to produce new forms of critique and praxis to address the present political conjuncture….
It is time then, once again, to return to Hegel, not to think with him, but rather, as it has so often been more productive, to think against and beyond him. It is time for another round of agonistic confrontations with Hegel’s writings—The Phenomenology of Spirit (1807), The Science of Logic (1812-1816), the Encyclopedia (1817), and the Principles of the Philosophy of Law (1820).
The multi-year project “Inversions of Hegel 13/13” will begin during the academic year 2025-2026 with preparatory sessions (informal conversations, small seminars, reading groups, and lectures) that will lay the groundwork for a 13/13 public seminar series on the confrontations with Hegel’s writings that have shaped world history. Throughout, the ambition will be to develop a new critical praxis for today.
Lots more, with a list of the planned sessions here – Althusser, Marx, Lenin, Nietzsche, Foucault, Sartre, Kojève, Marcuse, Adorno, Butler etc.. You can’t cover everyone of course, but for me striking there is no mention of Henri Lefebvre, whose engagement with Hegel is important for his reading of Marx and other parts of his work. A short introductory video:
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really appreciate them recording and sharing this whole series
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