Politikk som idékamp explained

Politikk som idékamp
Author:Johannes Waage Løvhaug
Country:Norway
Language:Norwegian
Genre:Non-fiction
Subject:The periodical Minerva (1957–1972)
Publisher:Pax Forlag
Pub Date:November 2007
Pages:336 pp.
Isbn:978-82-530-3046-3
Isbn Note:(13)

Politikk som idékamp: Et intellektuelt gruppeportrett av Minerva-kretsen 1957–1972 (English: Politics as Idea Struggle: An Intellectual Group Portrait of the Minerva Circle 1957–1972) is a 2007 book by Johannes W. Løvhaug. The book details the development and influence of the conservative periodical Minerva in post-war Norway. Its most distinguished editors, who were chiefly composed of students critical to the contemporaneous radicalisation of politics, are also portrayed. They are, together with the writers and the most loyal readers of periodical, described by Løvhaug as the "Minerva circle".

Background

At the time of publication, Johannes Løvhaug, aged 40, worked as a journalist for the periodical Apollon of the University of Oslo. In a 2007 interview with the left-wing weekly Morgenbladet, he stated that he wanted to study how the editors of Minerva criticised positivism from a conservative perspective.[1] Løvhaug states in the foreword of the book that it has two major purposes. One is to clarify the framework of the circle's activity, its political environment, what its purpose was and in which surroundings it operated. The other is to discover what kind of ideas were of importance to the circle and what kind of conservatism and ideological debate evolved from the periodical and the activity of the affiliated editors.

Content

The book is divided into three parts, with 13 chapters each, in addition to the introduction and the epilogue. The first part is named "En krets og et tidsskrift" ("A circle and a periodical"), the second "Det prepolitiske" ("The pre-political") and the third "Det politiske" ("The political").

Publication

Politikk som idékamp was published by the Norwegian left-wing publishing company Pax Forlag, together with the book Fra den annen front by the former Minerva editor Lars Roar Langslet. This happened in 2007, 50 years after the re-establishment of the periodical.[2]

Reception

The book received mixed critics by reviewers. In a review for the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation, Tarjei Skirbekk stated that it was "a good book", and that Løvhaug delivered an "interesting approach to the history of the Minerva circle and the society within which it operated".[3] However, Skirbekk criticised Løvhaug for having overestimated the influence and significance of the periodical.[3] Bernt Hagtvet stated in his review for Stavanger Aftenblad that the book was a "fine study", and that it brought back "the loss of a caring right".[4] Conversely, Ottar Brox, writing for the far-left daily newspaper Klassekampen, labelled the book a "paradoxical celebration of the front figures of the right-wing revolution".[5] In an article published in the left-liberal weekly Morgenbladet, journalist Pål Veiden opined that the book was too sympathetically inclined to the Minerva circle, and that it told many uninteresting details about the periodical.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Midttun. Lasse. Ungdom datildags. 12 December 2010. Morgenbladet. 9 November 2007. Lasse Midttun. https://web.archive.org/web/20110717134950/http://www.morgenbladet.no/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071109/OKULTUR/711090029. 17 July 2011. Norwegian. dead.
  2. News: Andenæs. Ulf. De konservatives tankesmie. Aftenposten Morgen. 25 November 2007. 10. Norwegian.
  3. News: Skirbekk. Tarjei. Politikk som idékamp. 10 December 2010. 12 November 2007. Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. Norwegian.
  4. News: Hagtvedt. Bernt. Konservativ balanseakt. Stavanger Aftenblad. 19 December 2007. 3. Norwegian. Johannes W. Løvhaugs fine studie bringer tilbake savnet av en tenksom høyreside..
  5. News: Brox. Ottar. De unges forbund. Klassekampen. 1 December 2007. Ottar Brox. 46. Norwegian. Paradoksal feiring av høyrebølgens frontfigurer..
  6. News: Veiden. Pål. Verden av i går. Morgenbladet. 11 January 2008. Pål Veiden. 34. https://web.archive.org/web/20110717135144/http://www.morgenbladet.no/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080111/OBOKER/990826545. 17 July 2011. dead. Norwegian.