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There follows a bibliography of György Lukács. Lukács (1885–1971) was a Hungarian Marxist philosopher and literary critic.

Books by Lukács in English
Items were seen in Cambridge University Library, in the library of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and in personal collections. A date in brackets is that of the original publication in Hungarian or German.

–1959

 * 1950. Studies in European Realism. Translated by Edith Bone, with a foreword by Roy Pascal. London: Hillway.

1960–1969

 * 1962. [1947, Hun.] The Historical Novel. Translated by Hannah Mitchell and Stanley Mitchell. London: Merlin.
 * 1963. [1955, Ger.] The Meaning of Contemporary Realism. Translated by John Mander and Necke Mander. London: Merlin.
 * 1964. [1947, Hun.] Essays on Thomas Mann. Translated by Stanley Mitchell. London: Merlin.
 * 1968. [1947, Ger.] Goethe and His Age. Translated by Robert Anchor. London: Merlin.

1970–1979

 * 1970. [1924, Ger.] Lenin. Translated by Nicholas Jacobs. London: New Left Books.
 * 1970. [1969, Ger.] Solzhenitsyn. Translated by William David Graf. London: Merlin.
 * 1970. Writer and Critic, and Other Essays. Edited and translated by Arthur Kahn. London: Merlin.
 * 1971. [1923, Ger.] History and Class Consciousness. Translated by Rodney Livingstone. London: Merlin.
 * 1971. [1920, Ger.] The Theory of the Novel. Translated by Anna Bostock. London: Merlin.
 * 1972. [1919, Hun.] Tactics and Ethics. Edited by Rodney Livingstone. London: New Left Books.
 * 1973. Marxism and Human Liberation. Edited by E. San Juan, Jr. New York: Dell.
 * 1974. Conversations with Lukács. Edited by Theo Pinkus. London: Merlin.
 * 1974. [1910, Hun.] Soul and Form. Translated by Anna Bostock. London: Merlin.
 * 1975. [1948, Ger.] The Young Hegel. Translated by Rodney Livingstone. London: Merlin.
 * 1978. The Ontology of Social Being. 1, Hegel's False and His Genuine Ontology. Translated by David Fernbach. London: Merlin.
 * 1978. The Ontology of Social Being. 2, Marx's Basic Ontological Principles. Translated by David Fernbach. London: Merlin.

1980–1989

 * 1980. [1954, Ger.] The Destruction of Reason. Translated by Peter Palmer. London: Merlin.
 * 1980. [1948, Ger.] Essays on Realism. Edited by Rodney Livingstone and translated by David Fernbach. London: Lawrence and Wishart.
 * 1980. The Ontology of Social Being. 3, Labour. Translated by David Fernbach. London: Merlin.
 * 1983. Record of a Life. Edited by István Eörsi and translated by Rodney Livingstone. London: Verso.
 * 1983. Reviews and Articles from "Die Rote Fahne". Translated by Peter Palmer. London: Merlin.
 * 1986. Selected Correspondence, 1902–1920. Edited and translated by Judith Marcus and Zoltán Tar. New York: Columbia University Press.

1990–1999

 * 1991. The Process of Democratization. Albany: State University of New York Press.
 * 1993. [1951, Ger.] German Realists in the Nineteenth Century. Edited by Rodney Livingstone and translated by Jeremy Gaines and Paul Keast. London: Libris.
 * 1995. The Lukács Reader. Edited by Arpad Kadarkay. Oxford: Blackwell.

2000–

 * 2000. [1996, Ger.] A Defence of "History and Class Consciousness." Translated by Esther Leslie, with an introduction by John Rees and a postface by Slavoj Žižek. London: Verso.
 * 2010. [1910, Hun.] Soul and Form. New ed. Edited by John T. Sanders and Katie Terezakis and translated by Anna Bostock, with an introduction by Judith Butler. New York: Columbia University Press.
 * 2012. The Culture of People's Democracy. Edited by Tyrus Miller. Leiden: Brill.

Articles and book contributions by Lukács in English
Items were seen in Cambridge University Library and in personal and dealers' collections.

–1959

 * 1920. "The Social Background of the White Terror." Workers' Dreadnaught, November 20: 1.
 * 1921. "The Problem of Communist Organisation." Communist Review, October: 41–49.
 * 1934. "Marx and Engels on Problems of Dramaturgy." International Theatre, no. 2: 11–14.
 * 1934. "Propaganda or Partisanship?" Partisan Review 1, no. 2: 36–46.
 * 1935. "Nietzsche, Forerunner of Fascist Esthetics." International Literature, no. 11: 67–80.
 * 1936. "Essay on the Novel." International Literature, no. 5: 68–74.
 * 1936. "The Intellectual Physiognomy of Literary Characters." International Literature, no. 8: 55–83.
 * 1937. "Narration vs. Description." International Literature, no. 6: 96–112; no. 7: 85–97.
 * 1938. "Walter Scott and the Historical Novel." International Literature, no. 4: 61–77; no. 5: 68–74.
 * 1939. "On Socialist Realism." International Literature, no. 4–5: 87–96.
 * 1948. "Problems of Marxist Culture." Masses and Mainstream, June: 6–18; July: 60–69.
 * 1949. "Existentialism." In Philosophy for the Future, edited by Roy Wood Sellars, V. J. McGill, and Marvin Farber, 571–590. New York: Macmillan.
 * 1949. "Idea and Form in Literature." Masses and Mainstream, December: 40–61.
 * 1951. "Don Quixote." Communist Review, September: 265–271.
 * 1952. "On Writing the History of Art." Communist Review, October: 309–316.
 * 1956. "On Stalinism." Survey, no. 10: 15–19.
 * 1957. "What is Orthodox Marxism?" New International, Summer: 179–197.

1960–1969

 * 1962. "Dostoevsky." In Dostoevsky, edited by René Wellek, 146–158. Englewood Cliffs: Spectrum.
 * 1962. "Thomas Mann." New Left Review 16: 76–87.
 * 1962. "To Narrate or Describe?" In Homer, edited by George Steiner and Robert Fagles, 86–89. Englewood Cliffs: Spectrum.
 * 1963. "Reflections on the Cult of Stalin." Survey, no. 47: 105–111.
 * 1964. "Introduction to a Monograph on Aesthetics." New Hungarian Quarterly 5, no. 14: 57–72.
 * 1964. "On Stalinism and Art." East Europe 13, no. 5: 22–26.
 * 1964. "Reflections on the Sino-Soviet Dispute." Studies on the Left 4, no. 1: 22–38.
 * 1965. "The Question of Romanticism." New Hungarian Quarterly 6, no. 18: 27–32.
 * 1965. "The Sociology of Modern Drama." Tulane Drama Review 9, no. 4: 146–170.
 * 1965. "Solzhenitsyn and the New Realism." In The Socialist Register 1965, edited by Ralph Miliband and John Saville, 197–215. London: Merlin.
 * 1966. "Technology and Social Relations." New Left Review 39: 27–34.
 * 1967. "Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm." International Social Science Journal 19, no. 4: 570–580.
 * 1968. "Wilhelm Meister's Lehrjahre." In Goethe, edited by Victor Lange, 86–98. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.
 * 1969. "On the Responsibility of Intellectuals." Telos 2, no. 1: 123–131.
 * 1969. "The Importance and Influence of Ady." New Hungarian Quarterly 10, no. 35: 56–63.

1970–1979

 * 1970. "The Dialectic of Labour: Beyond Causality and Teleology." Telos 6, no. 3: 162–174.
 * 1970. "Lenin, Theoretician of Practice." New Hungarian Quarterly 11, no. 40: 30–36.
 * 1970. "The Old Culture and the New Culture." Telos 5: 21–30.
 * 1970. "The Twin Crises." New Left Review 60: 36–47.
 * 1971. "Béla Bartok." New Hungarian Quarterly 12, no. 41: 42–55.
 * 1971. "Development of the Budapest School." Times Literary Supplement 70, June 11: 663.
 * 1971. "Lukács on His Life and Work." New Left Review 68: 49–58.
 * 1971. "Moses Hess and the Problem of Idealist Dialectics." Telos 10, no. 4: 3–34.
 * 1972. "Art and Society." New Hungarian Quarterly 13, no. 47: 44–56.
 * 1972. "Art as Self-Consciousness in Man's Development." In Marxism and Art, edited by Berel Lang and Forrest Williams, 228–239. New York: David McKay.
 * 1972. "A Final Rethinking." Social Policy 3, no. 2: 4–8, 56–57.
 * 1972. "The Historical Novel of Democratic Humanism." In Marxism and Art, edited by Berel Lang and Forrest Williams, 372–389. New York: David McKay.
 * 1972. "Labour as a Model of Social Practice." New Hungarian Quarterly 13, no. 47: 5–43.
 * 1972. "Letters from Lukács to Paul Ernst." New Hungarian Quarterly 13, no. 47: 88–99.
 * 1972. "Lukács on Futurology." New Hungarian Quarterly 13, no. 47: 100–107.
 * 1972. "Max Weber and German Sociology." Economy and Society 1, no. 4: 386–398.
 * 1972. "On the Phenomenology of the Creative Process." Philosophical Forum 3, no. 3–4: 314–325.
 * 1972. "On the Poverty of Spirit." Philosophical Forum 3, no. 3–4: 371–385.
 * 1972. "The Philosophy of Art (The 'Heidelberg Aesthetics')." New Hungarian Quarterly 13, no. 47: 57–87.
 * 1973. "Appearance and Essence." In Preserve and Create, edited by Gaylord C. Leroy and Ursula Beitz, 17–22. New York: Humanities Press.
 * 1973. "Approximation to Life in the Novel and the Play." In Sociology of Literature and Drama, edited by Elizabeth Burns and Tom Burns, 280–295. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
 * 1974. "About the Principles of Dramatic Form." Educational Theatre Journal 26, December: 513–521.
 * 1974. "The Poetry of the Film." New Hungarian Quarterly 15, no. 74: 62–67.
 * 1975. "Franz Kafka or Thomas Mann?" In Marxists on Literature, edited by David Craig, 380–394. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
 * 1975. "Tolstoy and the Development of Realism." In Marxists on Literature, edited by David Craig, 282–345. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
 * 1975. "On Youth, Art and Philosophy: A 1969 Radio Meeting." Hauser, Arnold, and György Lukács. New Hungarian Quarterly 16, no. 58: 96–105.
 * 1977. "Bolshevism as a Moral Problem." Social Research 44, Autumn: 416–424.
 * 1977. "Realism in the Balance." In Aesthetics and Politics, 28–59. London: New Left Books.
 * 1977. "An Unpublished Letter by Georg Lukács." Science and Society 41, no. 1: 66–68.
 * 1978. "On Bertolt Brecht." New Left Review 110: 88–92.
 * 1978. "On Walter Benjamin." New Left Review 110: 83–88.
 * 1978. "Preserving the Human Substance: On Tibor Dery's 70th Birthday." New Hungarian Quarterly, no. 71: 69–73.

1980–1989

 * 1981. "Thoughts on an Aesthetic for the Cinema." Framework 14: 2–4.
 * 1983. "Gelebtes Denken: An Autobiographical Sketch." New Hungarian Quarterly 24, no. 89: 66–95.
 * 1985. "The Present and Future of Democratization." New Hungarian Quarterly 26, no. 97: 100–114.
 * 1988. "Critical Realism and Socialist Realism." In Twentieth Century Literary Theory, edited by K. M. Newton, 89–92. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1988.

1990–1999

 * 1991. "Georg Simmel." Theory, Culture and Society 8, no. 3: 145–150.
 * 1996. "The Ideology of Modernism." In Marxist Literary Theory, edited by Terry Eagleton and Drew Milne, 141–???. Oxford: Blackwell, 1996.
 * 1996. "Marxist Aesthetics and Literary Realism." In Essentials of the Theory of Fiction, edited by Michael J. Hoffman and Patrick D. Murphy, 134–146. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
 * 1998. "Aesthetic Culture." Yale Journal of Criticism 11, no. 2: 365–379.
 * 1998. "The Historical Novel." In Literary Theory, edited by Julie Rivkin and Michael Ryan, 290–293. Oxford: Blackwell.

2000–

 * 2000. "Integrated Civilizations." In Literary Aesthetics, edited by Alan Singer and Allen Dunn, 34–37. Oxford: Blackwell.
 * 2001. "Thoughts Toward an Aesthetic of the Cinema." Polygraph 13: 13–18.
 * 2002. "Hegel's Aesthetics." Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal (New School for Social Research) 23, no. 2: 87–124.
 * 2006. "From Studies in European Realism." In The Novel, edited by Dorothy J. Hale, 379–393. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
 * 2010. "From The Historical Novel." In The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism, 2nd ed., edited by Vincent B. Leitch, 905–921. New York: W. W. Norton.

Books on Lukács in English
Items were seen in Cambridge University Library, in the library of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and in personal collections.

General and biographical studies

 * Arato, Andrew, and Paul Breines. The Young Lukács and the Origins of Western Marxism. New York: Seabury, 1979.
 * Bahr, Ehrhard, and Ruth Goldschmidt Kunzer. Georg Lukács. Modern Literature Monographs. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1972.
 * Bewes, Timothy, and Timothy Hall, eds. Georg Lukács: The Fundamental Dissonance of Existence. London: Continuum, 2011.
 * Congdon, Lee. The Young Lukács. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1983.
 * Corredor, Eva L., ed. Lukács After Communism: Interviews with Contemporary Intellectuals. Post-Contemporary Interventions. Durham: Duke University Press, 1997.
 * Feenberg, Andrew. Lukács, Marx, and the Sources of Critical Theory. Oxford: Martin Robertson, 1981.
 * Feenberg, Andrew. The Philosophy of Praxis: Marx, Lukács, and the Frankfurt School. London: Verso, 2014.
 * Fekete, Eva, and Eva Karadi, eds. György Lukács: His Life in Pictures and Documents. Budapest: Corvina, 1981.
 * Gluck, Mary. Georg Lukács and His Generation, 1900–1918. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1985.
 * Heller, Agnes, ed. Lukács Revalued. Oxford: Blackwell, 1983.
 * Illés, László, Farkas József, Miklós Szabolcsi, and István Szerdahelyi, eds. Hungarian Studies on György Lukács. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1993.
 * Joós, Ernest, ed. George Lukács and His World: A Reassessment. New York: Peter Lang, 1987.
 * Kadarkay, Arpad. Georg Lukács: Life, Thought and Politics. Oxford: Blackwell, 1991.
 * Lichtheim, George. Lukács. Modern Masters. London: Fontana, 1970.
 * Löwy, Michael. Georg Lukács: From Romanticism to Bolshevism. London: New Left Books, 1979.
 * Marcus, Judith, and Zoltán Tar, eds. Georg Lukács: Theory, Culture and Politics. New Brunswick: Transaction, 1989.
 * Parkinson, G. H. R. Georg Lukács. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977.
 * &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;, ed. Georg Lukács: The Man, His Work and His Ideas. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1969.
 * Rockmore, Tom, ed. Lukács Today: Essays in Marxist Philosophy. Dordrecht: D. Reidel, 1988.
 * Sim, Stuart. Georg Lukács. Modern Cultural Theorists. New York: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1994.
 * Thompson, Michael J. Georg Lukács Reconsidered: Critical Essays in Politics, Philosophy and Aesthetics. London: Continuum, 2011.
 * Zitta, Victor. Georg Lukács' Marxism: Alienation, Dialectics, Revolution. The Hague: Martin Nijhoff, 1964.

Special studies

 * Aitken, Ian. Lukácsian Film Theory and Cinema: A Study of Georg Lukács' Writings on Film, 1913–71. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2012.
 * Bernstein, J. M. The Philosophy of the Novel: Lukács, Marxism, and the Dialectics of Form. Brighton: Harvester, 1984.
 * Corredor, Eva L. György Lukács and the Literary Pretext. New York: Peter Lang, 1987.
 * Joós, Ernest. Lukács' Last Autocriticism: The "Ontology." Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1983.
 * Királyfalvi, Béla. The Aesthetics of György Lukács. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1975.
 * Mészáros, István. Lukács' Concept of Dialectic. London: Merlin, 1972.
 * Rockmore, Tom. Irrationalism: Lukács and the Marxist View of Reason. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993.
 * Shafai, Fariborz. The Ontology of Georg Lukács: Studies in Materialist Dialectics. Avebury Series in Philosophy. Aldershot: Avebury, 1996.
 * Varga, Csaba. The Place of Law in Lukács' World Concept. Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1985.
 * Vazsonyi, Nicholas. Lukács Reads Goethe: From Aestheticism to Stalinism. Studies in German Literature, Linguistics, and Culture. Columbia: Camden House, 1997.

Joint studies

 * Goldmann, Lucien. Lukács and Heidegger: Towards a New Philosophy. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977.
 * Marcus, Judith. Georg Lukács and Thomas Mann: A Study in the Sociology of Literature. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1987.
 * Pike, David. Lukács and Brecht. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1985.
 * Tihanov, Galin. The Master and the Slave: Lukács, Bakhtin, and the Ideas of Their Time. Oxford: Clarendon, 2000.

Bibliographies

 * Ambrus, János. A Selected Bibliography of Works by Georg Lukács. Budapest: Lukács Archives and Library, 1988.
 * Lapointe, François H. Georg Lukács and His Critics. Westport: Greenwood, 1983.
 * Murphy, Peter. Writings By and About Georg Lukács. Bibliographical Series. New York: American Institute for Marxist Studies, 1976.
 * Nordquist, Joan. Georg Lukács. Social Theory. Santa Cruz: Reference and Research Services, 1988.