@article {pichler_t2006:1393, title = {{\quotedblbase}Z{\'a}pad{\textquotedblleft} a {\quotedblbase}V{\'y}chod{\textquotedblleft} v etnickom romantizme {\v L}udov{\'\i}ta {\v S}t{\'u}ra}, journal = {Filozofia}, volume = {61}, number = {10}, year = {2006}, pages = {794-803}, type = {State}, abstract = {The paper gives an analytical description of the ideology of Slavonic spirit as an essence of culture. The principles of this ideology, from which a pretension on historical mission has been derived, was articulated by Russian Slavophils. In his writing Slavism and the world of future {\v L}udov{\'\i}t {\v S}t{\'u}r outlines this ideology to Central-European Slavs as well as to justify the need of adopting pan-Russian Slavism. His vocabulary and style are marked by political romanticism, while his conceptual map embodies dichotomies such as West/East, we/the others, religion/secularism. He finds the West to be in the state of political and moral decline, while the East (the Russian Slavism) is seen by him as the ground of a new civilization. The background of this way of thinking is his conservative utopism.}, author = {Tibor Pichler} }