Filo in dictatorship: A journey through documents from the School of Philosophy at the National University of Córdoba
Keywords:
dictatorship, University, school of philosophySynopsis
The Argentine philosophical field was not indifferent to the last military dictatorship. Like so many other areas of culture, it was subject to censorship, persecution, disappearances, and exile, while at the same time becoming a space for the expression of certain voices that, with a spirit of refoundation, hoped to give philosophical depth to the military government's political project. The School of Philosophy at the National University of Córdoba is a case study that allows us to investigate how both processes transformed the way philosophy was produced and taught, particularly in the academic sphere. This volume offers an approach to this question, providing readers with a set of documents—most of them previously unpublished—relating to the institutional life of the School of Philosophy at the UNC during the period 1976-1980.
Chapters
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Foreword
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Note from the editors
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The School of Philosophy and a philosophy for “reorganizing” the University
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The plan in question: curricular definitions in the philosophy degree program during the 1970s
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A philosophical contribution to the “National Project.” The First National Philosophy Conference: Freedom (Vaquerías, 1977)
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“You cannot govern with ideas alone, but neither can you govern without them”: Videla at the First World Congress of Christian Philosophy (Córdoba, 1979)
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History and teaching of philosophy under dictatorship
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