Insurgentes
History, literature, philosophy, and the arts have been shaped as a reflection of the relationship between culture and politics. Their web of alliances, oppositions, infatuations, and appropriations have defined, and continue to define, our world. Politics and culture clash because, in themselves, they are two powers, albeit interdependent, that are uncomfortable with subjugation. In César Antonio Molina's work, reflections on culture and politics are intertwined in a truthful way, like an Odysseus who has sailed on both seas, and not with the imposture and ignorance of someone who has only seen the world from a single perspective. With the relationship between the intellectual and power as the central theme, the author weaves a tapestry of erudition, feeling, and wise foresight through which insurgents such as Aristotle, Derrida, Dante, Hölderlin, Zambrano, and Arendt pass. All of them are seen through the incisive and erudite lens of a comrade-in-arms, an initiate into the same mystery cults of literature and thought.
Erasmus Ediciones
978-84-15462-25-5


