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Georges Politzer | |
---|---|
Born | 3 May 1903 Navyvarod, Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Empire |
Died | 23 May 1942 France |
Cause of death | Execution by firing squad |
Nationality | Hungarian |
Known for | Marxist Philosophy |
Georges Politzer was a Hungarian Marxist who spent most of his adult life in France where he made large contributions to Marxist philosophy through his work at the Workers' University of Paris. He was murdered by the Nazis during the Second World War after he was captured and refused to write theoretical pamphlets of National Socialism.
Life[edit | edit source]
Georges Politzer was born in Nagyvarad, Hungary a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire (present day Oradea, Romania) on May 3, 1903. He left Hungary after the defeat of Bela Kun’s abortive Soviet Republic, settling in France in 1921. In the course of his travels he met Freud and Sandor Ferenczi in Vienna, and his interest in psychology resulted in the publication in him writing Critique of the Foundations of Psychology, the first outline of a materialist theory of social psychology.[1]
In France sometime between 1929-31 he joined the French Communist Party on his second attempt, where he was in charge of the Economic Commission of the Central Committee. He taught at both the Workers’ University and the PCF’s central school, and was among the founding group of the revue La Pensée.[1]
In September 1940, with France occupied, he entered the fight against the Nazis and launched two clandestine journals, which he wrote for under the pen name Rameau, one of which he used to attack Alfred Rosenberg. Along with his wife Mai, a fellow communist resistance fighter, he was arrested in February 1942 for violation of the law banning the Communist Party. While imprisoned at Santé prison in Paris he was in a cell next to that of communist resistance member Marie-Claude Vaillant-Couturier, years later she would speak of Politzer’s prison experience during her testimony at the Nuremberg War Crimes trial.[1]
Politzer was brutally interrogated, after beating him, the interrogators asked if he wanted to write theoretical pamphlets for National-Socialism. When he refused they told him he would be put on the first train of hostages to be executed. As threatened on March 20, 1942 he was turned over to the Nazis and he was executed with a group of hostages on May 23,1942. His wife was transported to Auschwitz, where she died in March 1943.[1]
Many of his courses and writings would later be posthumously published where they continue to be relevant to Marxist theory to present day.[1]