Filip Kovacevic

Filip Kovacevic
Born (1975-10-06)October 6, 1975
Kotor, Montenegro, Yugoslavia
Occupation Author, Human Rights Activist, University Professor
Genre essays, columns, lectures
Spouse Olga Bachynskaya-Kovacevic

Filip Kovacevic is a Montenegrin author, human rights activist, and university professor.

Biography

Filip Kovacevic was born in the Montenegrin town of Kotor on the coast of the Adriatic sea, then part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He graduated summa cum laude from the California State University, Hayward in 1997. He continued his education at the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri receiving a PhD in political science in 2002. He taught at the Smolny College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the first liberal arts college in Russia from 2003 to 2005. In 2005, he returned to Montenegro and was the first person to teach political psychology and psychoanalytic theory at the University of Montenegro[1] and hold lectures on geopolitics and its key theoretical schools.[2] Kovacevic has been invited to lecture on contemporary psychoanalytic and critical social theory at the universities in Russia, Ukraine, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Austria, Serbia and the United States. He writes geopolitical essays and commentaries for various print and digital media.

Since his return to Montenegro, Kovacevic has been one of the leading intellectual figures campaigning for democratic reforms, the rule of law, and the protection of human rights.[3] He has been sharply critical of the ruling oligarchy, its abuse of Montenegrin state resources and persecution of political opponents as well as its servile foreign policy. The only Montenegrin independent political weekly Monitor frequently conducts interviews with Kovacevic on the issues of political and social importance.[4] The Montenegrin daily newspaper Vijesti publishes Kovacevic's columns.[5] The Viennese newspaper Die Presse published an article which examines Kovacevic's views of the Montenegrin democratic process. According to the article, Kovacevic believes that "in Montenegro, the wall of political repression has not yet fallen".[6] He has also been cited as an expert on Montenegrin politics by the Southeastern European Times and Der Standard.[7] He has frequently aired his views on TV.[8] Kovacevic is seen as one of the key advocates of the Montenegrin military neutrality and against the entrance of Montenegro into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.[9] He is a close associate of the former foreign minister of Montenegro Miodrag Lekić, who was the leader of the Democratic Front, the main opposition political alliance in Montenegro. Kovacevic is the chairman of the Movement for Neutrality of Montenegro.[10]

The Montenegrin sociologist and writer Milan N. Popović has made Kovacevic into one of the main protagonists in his novel Ibrahim 2044-1994: Kratki roman o čovjeku i Bogu.[11]

List of Selected Works

Commentators & Critics

The American author and university professor Ellie Ragland has stated that Kovacevic's book Liberating Oedipus? Psychoanalysis as Critical Theory presents "a compelling critique of liberation theories, starting with Freud and Marx and going up to Alain Badiou... This book is a tour de force and necessary reading for anyone engaged in the contemporary study of politics and critical theory.[12] The New Zealand sociologist Chamsy el-Ojeili wrote a detailed review of Kovacevic's book for the journal of academic sociology Thesis Eleven.[13] Liberating Oedipus? has also been cited in the master's and doctoral theses on psychoanalysis as critical, social theory.

The Croatian philosopher Lino Veljak has written that Kovacevic's study of the ideas of the French philosopher Michel Onfray represents "an important contribution to the affirmation of the values of the Enlightenment".[14] This study was also positively reviewed by the theater director and art critic Zlatko Paković in the Serbian daily newspaper Danas.[15] Kovacevic has also published three other books and a dozen of essays and articles. His works have been translated into English, German, French, Russian, Bulgarian, and Turkish. He is one of the few Montenegrin authors whose work can be found in the libraries of the best American universities.

See also

References

External links

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