Authoritarianism & Philosophy: After Orbán’s Ouster, an Effort to Reopen the Lukács Archive
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June 15, 2026
“Philosophers were the first targets of Orbán’s ‘culture war.’” That’s László Szücs (Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg), talking to Courthouse News Service about “the so-called ‘philosophers’ affair’: Orbán’s and his media’s first major anti-intellectual campaign.” It is “the saga of how the government slowly throttled an archive and research center inside the old apartment of György Lukács, a world-renowned Marxist philosopher from Budapest.” Szücs is part of the Lukács Archive International Foundation, a group working to reopen the apartment to the public. Reporter Cain Burdeau writes: The throttling began on Jan. 8, 2011, when the Magyar Nemzet ran a slanderous editorial accusing a group of prominent Hungarian philosophers—many of them associated with Lukács and fierce Orbán critics—of receiving “morally and legally questionable” funding worth about $2 million when Hungary was under a previous socialist-liberal government. The funds actually did not go directly to the prominent philosophers, but rather covered the work of research groups, numerous philosophers and doctoral students, book publications and conferences. At the time, the Magyar Nemzet (“Hungarian Nation”) served as the mouthpiece for Orbán’s freshly elected government. Thus began the “philosophers’ affair”—an early and important thread to follow in understanding how Orbán’s “illiberal revolution” turned Hungary into Europe’s far-right model. Only eight months before that editorial, Orbán and his right-wing Fidesz party had routed the long-governing center-left Hungarian Socialist Party and won a commanding supermajority in Parliament. With near-unchecked power, Orbán set about molding Hungary into a fiefdom where left-liberal opponents were not tolerated… The Magyar Nemzet editorial was scathing in its attack on the left-liberal philosophers. It took particular aim at the 82-year-old Ágnes Heller, a Lukács disciple and prominent philosopher who held the Hannah Arendt chair at The New School in New York City. Their sin, according to the Magyar Nemzet, was that they were “liberals” who had “not settled for staying in the ivory tower” and wished to “share their views and thoughts with a wider public beyond the academic arena.” In other words, these philosophers—Heller, Mihály Vajda, Sándor Radnóti and others—had overstepped their positions by becoming outspoken critics of Orbán and his politics. Shortly after the editorial appeared, Gyula Budai, Orban’s anti-corruption commissioner, launched an investigation into the “suspicious” philosophy grants. The probe was turned over..
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