Leonid Luks's Lecture within the Framework of the Seminar "West and East: Universalism of Culture"
On November 22, 2017 at the seminar "West and East: Universalism of Culture" Leonid Luks gave an open lecture
On November 22, 2017 within the framework of the seminar "West and East: Universalism of Culture," Leonid Luks, the professor of the Catholic University (Aichstatt), the academic supervisor of the International Laboratory for the Study of Russian and European Intellectual Dialogue, gave the open lecture "Notes on the "revolutionary traditionalist" cultural model of Eurasianism". The reporter noted that the Eurasian movement, which in 1921 loudly proclaimed itself with its digest "Exodus to the East", invoked the Russian educated class to reconsider their traditional ideological attitudes. Unlike the overwhelming majority of the antagonists of Bolsheviks who were defeated and forced to flee, the Eurasianists tried to find positive aspects in the Russian Apocalypse (V. Rozanov). In his report, Professor Luks also gave an answer to the question "How are the Eurasians different from the Slavophiles?"
The meeting was led by Professor Marina Kiseleva, the chief research fellow of the International Laboratory for the Study of Russian and European Intellectual Dialogue, and moderated by the professor Alexey Kara-Murza, the chief research fellow of the International Laboratory for the Study of Russian and European Intellectual Dialogue.
Alexey Kara-Murza
Chief Research Fellow
Marina Kiseleva
Chief Research Fellow
Leonid Luks
Academic Supervisor