Srećko Horvat  

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Srećko Horvat (born 1983) is a philosopher, author, and political activist. The German weekly Der Freitag described him as "one of the most exciting voices of his generation" and Hollywood director Oliver Stone called him “a charismatic Croatian philosopher.” His writing has appeared in The Guardian, Al Jazeera, Il Manifesto, El Pais, and The New York Times.

Contents

Political thought and activity

Horvat is regarded as one of the "central figures of the new left in post-Yugoslavia". He has participated in different activist movements in Croatia. In Germany he published the book After the End of History: From the Arab Spring to the Occupy Movement (Laika Verlag, 2013), where he is engaged in debates and interviews about Occupy Wall Street, Chinese capitalism, poststructuralism and postcolonialism with different thinkers such as Francis Fukuyama, Stéphane Hessel, Terry Eagleton, Gayatri Spivak, etc. In his work with Igor Štiks he has been advocating "direct democracy as a necessary corrective (and possibly a true alternative) to electoral democracy and partitocracy" and, more recently, he is claiming that "it is becoming more and more clear that a movement without a party is impotent, and that a party without a movement can only repeat the failures of the past".

The Subversive Festival

He was one of the founders of the Subversive Festival in 2008, a festival which included Oliver Stone, Alexis Tsipras, Aleida Guevara, Slavoj Žižek, Tariq Ali, Zygmunt Bauman, David Harvey, Saskia Sassen, etc. In 2013 together with the programme team he left the Subversive Festival "due to differences in understanding the goals and direction of the activist platforms within Subversive Forum and, more generally, the general purpose of Subversive Festival".

Cancellation of 'Sane Society' television program

During 2013 Horvat was the host and author of an intellectual TV show on Croatian National Television called Zdravo Društvo (Sane Society) which tried to recreate the Balkan cultural space and hosted many intellectuals such as Renata Salecl, Rade Šerbedžija, Andrej Nikolaidis, Viktor Ivančić, etc. Officially it was called off by the management because of “austerity measures”. However, the Bosnian writer Miljenko Jergović wrote that the TV show likely would not have been removed if not for an opinion piece Horvat wrote in the Guardian that criticized an anti-gay-marriage referendum and, more generally, the movement of Croatian society in a culturally conservative if not fascistic direction. Jergović wrote, "If he had written it in 1942 he would've ended up in Jasenovac concentration camp. If he had written it in 1972 he would've ended up in Lepoglava prison. But in 2014 he only lost his TV show because he wrote the truth about Croatia.”

Bibliography

In English

What does Europe want? The Union and its Discontents with Slavoj Žižek, Istros Books, 2013

In French

• "Sauvons-nous de nos sauveurs", Éditions Lignes, 2013

In German

Nach dem Ende der Geschichte Laika-Verlag, Hamburg, 2013
Was will Europa? – Rettet uns vor den Rettern (with Slavoj Žižek) Laika-Verlag, Hamburg, 2013

In Croatian

Što Europa želi? (with Slavoj Žižek), Algoritam, Zagreb, 2013
Pažnja! Neprijatelj prisluškuje Naklada Ljevak, Zagreb, 2011
Pravo na pobunu (with Igor Štiks), Fraktura, Zagreb, 2010
Ljubav za početnike Naklada Ljevak, Zagreb, 2009
Budućnost je ovdje Svijet distopijskog filma, HFS, Zagreb, 2008
Totalitarizam danas Antibarbarus, Zagreb, 2008
Diskurs terorizma AGM, Zagreb, 2008
Znakovi postmodernog grada Jesenski i Turk, Zagreb, 2007
Protiv političke korektnosti. Od Kramera do Laibacha, i natrag", Biblioteka XX. Vek, Beograd, 2007.

In Spanish

· La radicalidad del amor Katakrak, Iruñea-Pamplona, 2016.

See also




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Srećko Horvat" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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