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Ernst Bloch

See also Ernest Bloch the composer.

Ernst Bloch (July 8, 1885 - August 4, 1977) was a German Marxist philosopher and theologian. He was born in Ludwigshafen, the son of an assimilated Jewish railway-employee. After studying philosophy, he married Else von Stritzky, daughter of a Baltic brewer. His second wife was Karola Bloch, whom he married 1934 in Vienna. When the Nazis came to power, they had to flee, first into Switzerland, then to Austria, France, Czechoslovakia, and finally the USA. Bloch returned to the GDR in 1949 and got a chair for philosophy in Leipzig. When the wall was built in 1961, he did not return to the GDR, but went to Tübingen in the FRG, where he received a honorary chair in Philosophy. He died in Tübingen.

Bloch's work became very influential in the course of the student protest movements in 1968 and in liberation theology.

Works

  • Das Prinzip Hoffnung (Frankfurt 1959), written between 1938-1947 in the USA (The Principle of Hope)
  • Geist der Utopie
  • Erbschaft dieser Zeit (Zürich 1935)
  • Atheismus im Christentum (Atheism in Christianity, NY 1972)
  • Subjekt-Objekt, Erläuterungen zu Hegel
  • Naturrecht und menschliche Würde
  • Thomas Münzer als Theologe der Revolution
  • Experimentum Mundi
  • Spuren (Berlin 1930)

Further reading

  • Arno Münster, L'utopie concréte d'Ernst Bloch (Paris, 2001).

External links

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