The SAGE Handbook of Frankfurt School Critical Theory
Editat de Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld, Chris O'Kaneen Limba Engleză Electronic book text – 17 iun 2018
- Volume I: Key Texts and Contributions to a Critical Theory of Society
- Volume II: Themes
- Volume III: Contexts
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781526455642
ISBN-10: 1526455641
Pagini: 1800
Dimensiuni: 184 x 246 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: SAGE Publications
Colecția Sage Publications Ltd
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1526455641
Pagini: 1800
Dimensiuni: 184 x 246 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: SAGE Publications
Colecția Sage Publications Ltd
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Recenzii
TheHandbook
of
Frankfurt
School
Critical
Theoryis
and
will
be
essential
for
anyone
who
wants
to
approach,
study
in
depth
and
orientate
oneself
in
that
which
falls
under
the
name
of
critical
theory.
The
authors
of
this
volumes,
extending
the
basis
of
the
foundation
of
critical
theory
to
include
thinkers
such
as
Bloch,
Benjamin,
Lukács,
Kracauer,
Sohn-Rethel,
and
others,
give
us
more
of
an
image
of
a
large
bush
than
that
of
a
tree
whose
roots
are
planted
in
the
city
of
Frankfurt
alone.
In
this
way,
critical
theory
is
de-provincialized,
meeting
Bolívar
Echeverría
and
Adolfo
Sánchez
Vázquez;
and
it
branches
out
further
in
its
encounter
with
contemporary
social
and
political
movements
and
theories,
including
feminism
and
gendered
dynamics
of
social
reproduction.
Through
the
voices
of
these
great
volumes,
critical
theory
acquires
new
vitality
from
its
dialogue
with
other
traditions
and
critical
discourses
of
capitalist
modernity,
showing
that
it
is
capable
of
transforming
itself
based
on
the
variety
of
contemporary
contexts.
The SAGE Handbook of Frankfurt School Critical Theoryis a superb collection of high-quality essays on a vast array of aspects of the theoretical programs and empirical research conducted at or in relation to the Institute of Social Research, founded in Frankfurt almost a century ago. The authors of the essays include prominent proponents, careful students, and sophisticated critics of critical theory. At a time when the uncompromising contributions to illuminating the contradictions and paradoxes of modern societies – by both the classics (including Horkheimer, Adorno, and Marcuse) and more recent representatives of this complex tradition – constitute a model for research that is determined to “make a difference,” theSAGE Handbookwill be an indispensable and lasting resource scholars and researchers should – and will – return to frequently.
This handbook reminds us that authority and oppression must be fought not only through rhetoric and language dispositive, but through an integral social program, empirically and theoretically attentive to economic, psychological and sociocultural phenomena.
The structure of the edition is another proof of the work’s excellency. Choosing simplicity, each volume but the second is divided into three parts. The articles that comprise these volumes are not only carefully selected, but as conceptually consistent and deep as the premises announced in the introduction to the first volume show.
The SAGE Handbook of Frankfurt School Critical Theoryis a superb collection of high-quality essays on a vast array of aspects of the theoretical programs and empirical research conducted at or in relation to the Institute of Social Research, founded in Frankfurt almost a century ago. The authors of the essays include prominent proponents, careful students, and sophisticated critics of critical theory. At a time when the uncompromising contributions to illuminating the contradictions and paradoxes of modern societies – by both the classics (including Horkheimer, Adorno, and Marcuse) and more recent representatives of this complex tradition – constitute a model for research that is determined to “make a difference,” theSAGE Handbookwill be an indispensable and lasting resource scholars and researchers should – and will – return to frequently.
This handbook reminds us that authority and oppression must be fought not only through rhetoric and language dispositive, but through an integral social program, empirically and theoretically attentive to economic, psychological and sociocultural phenomena.
The structure of the edition is another proof of the work’s excellency. Choosing simplicity, each volume but the second is divided into three parts. The articles that comprise these volumes are not only carefully selected, but as conceptually consistent and deep as the premises announced in the introduction to the first volume show.
Cuprins
VOLUME
01:
Key
Texts
and
Contributions
to
a
Critical
Theory
of
Society
Chapter 1: Introduction: Key Texts and Contributions to a Critical Theory of Society - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld and Chris O'Kane
SECTION 01: The Frankfurt School and Critical theory
Chapter 2: Max Horkheimer and the Early Model of Critical Theory - John Abromeit
Chapter 3: Leo Löwenthal: Last Man Standing - Christoph Hesse
Chapter 4: Erich Fromm: Psychoanalysis and the Fear of Freedom - Kieran Durkin
Chapter 5: Henryk Grossmann: Theory of Accumulation and Breakdown - Paul Mattick
Chapter 6: Franz L. Neumann’s Behemoth: A Materialist Voice in the Gesamtgestalt of Fascist Studies - Karsten Olson
Chapter 7: Otto Kirchheimer: Capitalist State, Political Parties and Political Justice - Frank Schale, Lisa Klingsporn and Hubertus Buchstein
Chapter 8: The Image of Benjamin - David Kaufmann
Chapter 9: Dialectic of Enlightenment. Philosophical Fragments. - Marcel Stoetzler
Chapter 10: Herbert Marcuse: Critical Theory as Radical Socialism - Charles Reitz
Chapter 11: Theodor W. Adorno and Negative Dialectics - Nico Bobka and Dirk Braunstein
SECTION 02: Theoretical Elaborations of a Critical Social Theory
Chapter 12: Ernst Bloch: The Principle of Hope - Cat Moir
Chapter 13: Georg Lukács: An Actually Existing Antinomy - Eric-John Russell
Chapter 14: Siegfried Kracauer: Documentary Realist and Critic of Ideological “Homelessness” - Ansgar Martins
Chapter 15: Alfred Seidel and the Nihilisation of Nihilism: A contribution to the prehistory of the Frankfurt School - Christian Voller
Chapter 16: Arkadij Gurland: Political Science as Critical Theory - Hubertus Buchstein
Chapter 17: Alfred Sohn-Rethel: Real Abstraction and the Unity of Commodity-Form and Thought Form - Frank Engster and Oliver Schlaudt
Chapter 18: Alfred Schmidt: On the Critique of Social Nature - Hermann Kocyba
Chapter19: Oskar Negt and Alexander Kluge: From the Underestimated Subject to the Political Constitution of Commonwealth - Richard Langston
Chapter 20: Hans-Jürgen Krahl: Social Constitution and Class Struggle - Jordi Maiso
Chapter 21: Johannes Agnoli: Subversive Thought, the Critique of the State and (Post-)Fascism - Stephan Grigat
Chapter 22: Helmut Reichelt and the New Reading of Marx - Ingo Elbe
Chapter 23: Hans-Georg Backhaus: The Critique of Premonetary Theories of Value and the Perverted Forms of Economic Reality - Riccardo Bellofiore & Tommaso Redolfi Riva
Chapter 24: Jürgen Habermas: Against Obstacles to Public Debates - Christoph Henning
SECTION 03: Critical Reception and Further Developments
Chapter 25: Gillian Rose: The Melancholy Science - Andrew Brower Latz
Chapter 26: Bolívar Echeverría: Critical Discourse and Capitalist Modernity - Andrés Saenz De Sicilia
Chapter 27: Adolfo Sánchez Vázquez: Philosophy of Praxis as Critical Theory - Stefan Gandler
Chapter 28: Roberto Schwarz: : Mimesis Beyond Realism - Nicholas Brown
Chapter 29: Aborted and/or Completed Modernization: Introducing Paulo Arantes - Pedro Rocha de Oliveira
Chapter 30: Fredric Jameson - Carolyn Lesjak
Chapter 31: Moishe Postone: Marx's Critique of Political Economy as Immanent Social Critique - Elena Louisa Lange
Chapter 32: John Holloway: The Theory of Interstitial Revolution - Ana Cecilia Dinerstein
Chapter 33: Radical Political or Neo-Liberal Imaginary? Nancy Fraser Revisited - Claudia Leeb
Chapter 34: Axel Honneth and Critical Theory - Michael J. Thompson
VOLUME 02: Themes
Chapter 35: Introduction: Key Themes in Context of the Twentieth Century - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld and Chris O'Kane
SECTION 04: State, Economy, Society
Chapter 36: Society as “Totality”: On the negative-dialectical presentation of capitalist socialization - Lars Heitmann
Chapter 37: Society and Violence - Sami Khatib
Chapter 38: Society and History - José A. Zamora
Chapter 39: Totality and Technological Form - Samir Gandesha
Chapter 40: Materialism - Sebastian Truskolaski
Chapter 41: Theology and Materialism - Julia Jopp and Ansgar Martins
Chapter 42: Social Constitution and Class - Tom Houseman
Chapter 43: Critical Theory and Utopian Thought - Alexander Neupert-Doppler
Chapter 44: Praxis, Nature, Labour - Stefan Gandler
Chapter 45: Critical Theory and Epistemological and Social-Economical Critique - Frank Engster
Chapter 46: Critical Theory and the Critique of Political Economy: From Critical Political Economy to the Critique of Political Economy - Patrick Murray
Chapter 47: The Critique of Value and the Crisis of Capitalist Society - Josh Robinson
Chapter 48: The Frankfurt School and Fascism - Lars Fischer
Chapter 49: Society and Political Form - Alexander Neupert-Doppler
Chapter50: The Administered World - Hans-Ernst Schiller
Chapter 51: Commodity Form and the Form of Law - Andreas Harms
Chapter 52: Walter Benjamin’s Concept of Law - Amy Swiffen
Chapter 53: Security and Police - Mark Neocleous
Chapter 54: On the Authoritarian Personality - James Murphy
Chapter 55: Antisemitism and the Critique of Capitalism - Lars Fischer
Chapter 56: Race and the Politics of Recognition - Christopher Chen
Chapter 57: Society, Regression, Psychoanalysis, or ‘Capitalism Is Responsible for Your Problems with Your Girlfriend’: On the Use of Psychoanalysis in the Work of the Frankfurt School - Benjamin Y. Fong and Scott Jenkins
SECTION 05: Culture and Aesthetics
Chapter 58: The Culture Industry - Christian Lotz
Chapter 59: Erziehung: The Critical Theory of Education and Counter-Education - Matthew Charles
Chapter 60: Aesthetics and its Critique: The Frankfurt Aesthetic Paradigm - Johan Hartle
Chapter 61: Rather no art than socialist realism Adorno, Beckett and Brecht - Isabelle Klasen
Chapter 62: Adorno's Brecht: The Other Origin of Negative Dialectics - Matthias Rothe
Chapter 63: Critical Theory and Literary Theory - Mathias Nilges
Chapter 64: Cinema – Spectacle – Modernity - Johannes von Moltke
Chapter 65: On Music and Dissonance: Hinge - Murray Dineen
Chapter 66: Art, Technology, and Repetition - Marina Vishmidt
Chapter 67: On Ideology, Aesthetics, and Critique - Owen Hulatt
VOLUME 03: Contexts
Chapter 68: Introduction: Contexts of Critical Theory - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld, and Chris O’Kane
SECTION 06: Contexts of the emergence of Critical Theory
Chapter 69: Marx, Marxism, Critical Theory - Jan Hoff
Chapter 70: The Frankfurt School and Council Communism - Felix Baum
Chapter 71: Positivism - Anders Ramsay
Chapter 72: Critical Theory and the Sociology of Knowledge: Diverging Cultures of Reflexivity - Oliver Schlaudt
Chapter 73: Critical Theory and Weberian Sociology - Klaus Lichtblau
Chapter 74: Critical Theory and the Philosophy of Language - Philip Hogh
Chapter 75: Psychoanalysis and Critical Theory - Inara Luisa Marin
Chapter 76: Humanism and Anthropology from Walter Benjamin to Ulrich Sonnemann - Dennis Johannßen
Chapter 77: Art and Revolution - Jasper Bernes
SECTION 07: Contexts of the later developments of Critical Theory
Chapter 78: The Spectacle and the Culture Industry, the Transcendence of Art and the Autonomy of Art: Some Parallels between Theodor Adorno’s and Guy Debord’s Critical Concepts - Anselm Jappe
Chapter 79: Workerism and Critical Theory - Vincent Chanson and Frédéric Monferrand
Chapter 80: Open Marxism and Critical Theory: Negative Critique and Class as Critical Concept - Christos Memos
Chapter 81: Post-Marxism - Christian Lotz
Chapter 82: Critical Theory and Cultural Studies - Tom Bunyard
Chapter 83: Constellations of Critical Theory and Feminist Critique - Gudrun-Axeli Knapp
Chapter 84: Critical Theory and Recognition - Richard Gunn and Adrian Wilding
Chapter 85: 'Ideas with Broken Wings': Critical Theory and Postcolonial Theory - Asha Varadharajan
SECTION 08: ELEMENTS OF CRITICAL THEORY IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL AND POLITICAL MOVEMENTS AND THEORIES
SECTION 86: Biopolitics as a Critical Diagnosis - Frieder Vogelmann
Chapter 87: Critical International Relations Theory - Shannon Brincat
Chapter 88: Space, Form, and Urbanity - Greig Charnock
Chapter 89: Critical theory and the critique of anti-imperialism - Marcel Stoetzler
Chapter 90: Mass Culture and the Internet - Nick Dyer-Witheford
Chapter 91: Environmentalism and the Domination of Nature - Michelle Yates
Chapter 92: Feminist Critical Theory and the Problem of (Counter)Enlightenment in the Decay of Capitalist Patriarchy - Roswitha Scholz
Chapter 93: Gender and Social Reproduction - Amy De'Ath
Chapter 94: Rackets - Gerhard Scheit
Chapter 95: Subsumption and Crisis - Joshua Clover
Chapter 96: The Figure of Crisis in Critical Theory - Amy Chun Kim
Chapter 97: Neoliberalism: Critical Theory as Natural-History - Charles Prusik
Chapter 98: On Emancipation… - Sergio Tischler Visquerra and Alfonso Galileo García Vela
Chapter 99: Crisis and Immiseration: critical theory today - Aaron Benanav and John Clegg
Chapter 1: Introduction: Key Texts and Contributions to a Critical Theory of Society - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld and Chris O'Kane
SECTION 01: The Frankfurt School and Critical theory
Chapter 2: Max Horkheimer and the Early Model of Critical Theory - John Abromeit
Chapter 3: Leo Löwenthal: Last Man Standing - Christoph Hesse
Chapter 4: Erich Fromm: Psychoanalysis and the Fear of Freedom - Kieran Durkin
Chapter 5: Henryk Grossmann: Theory of Accumulation and Breakdown - Paul Mattick
Chapter 6: Franz L. Neumann’s Behemoth: A Materialist Voice in the Gesamtgestalt of Fascist Studies - Karsten Olson
Chapter 7: Otto Kirchheimer: Capitalist State, Political Parties and Political Justice - Frank Schale, Lisa Klingsporn and Hubertus Buchstein
Chapter 8: The Image of Benjamin - David Kaufmann
Chapter 9: Dialectic of Enlightenment. Philosophical Fragments. - Marcel Stoetzler
Chapter 10: Herbert Marcuse: Critical Theory as Radical Socialism - Charles Reitz
Chapter 11: Theodor W. Adorno and Negative Dialectics - Nico Bobka and Dirk Braunstein
SECTION 02: Theoretical Elaborations of a Critical Social Theory
Chapter 12: Ernst Bloch: The Principle of Hope - Cat Moir
Chapter 13: Georg Lukács: An Actually Existing Antinomy - Eric-John Russell
Chapter 14: Siegfried Kracauer: Documentary Realist and Critic of Ideological “Homelessness” - Ansgar Martins
Chapter 15: Alfred Seidel and the Nihilisation of Nihilism: A contribution to the prehistory of the Frankfurt School - Christian Voller
Chapter 16: Arkadij Gurland: Political Science as Critical Theory - Hubertus Buchstein
Chapter 17: Alfred Sohn-Rethel: Real Abstraction and the Unity of Commodity-Form and Thought Form - Frank Engster and Oliver Schlaudt
Chapter 18: Alfred Schmidt: On the Critique of Social Nature - Hermann Kocyba
Chapter19: Oskar Negt and Alexander Kluge: From the Underestimated Subject to the Political Constitution of Commonwealth - Richard Langston
Chapter 20: Hans-Jürgen Krahl: Social Constitution and Class Struggle - Jordi Maiso
Chapter 21: Johannes Agnoli: Subversive Thought, the Critique of the State and (Post-)Fascism - Stephan Grigat
Chapter 22: Helmut Reichelt and the New Reading of Marx - Ingo Elbe
Chapter 23: Hans-Georg Backhaus: The Critique of Premonetary Theories of Value and the Perverted Forms of Economic Reality - Riccardo Bellofiore & Tommaso Redolfi Riva
Chapter 24: Jürgen Habermas: Against Obstacles to Public Debates - Christoph Henning
SECTION 03: Critical Reception and Further Developments
Chapter 25: Gillian Rose: The Melancholy Science - Andrew Brower Latz
Chapter 26: Bolívar Echeverría: Critical Discourse and Capitalist Modernity - Andrés Saenz De Sicilia
Chapter 27: Adolfo Sánchez Vázquez: Philosophy of Praxis as Critical Theory - Stefan Gandler
Chapter 28: Roberto Schwarz: : Mimesis Beyond Realism - Nicholas Brown
Chapter 29: Aborted and/or Completed Modernization: Introducing Paulo Arantes - Pedro Rocha de Oliveira
Chapter 30: Fredric Jameson - Carolyn Lesjak
Chapter 31: Moishe Postone: Marx's Critique of Political Economy as Immanent Social Critique - Elena Louisa Lange
Chapter 32: John Holloway: The Theory of Interstitial Revolution - Ana Cecilia Dinerstein
Chapter 33: Radical Political or Neo-Liberal Imaginary? Nancy Fraser Revisited - Claudia Leeb
Chapter 34: Axel Honneth and Critical Theory - Michael J. Thompson
VOLUME 02: Themes
Chapter 35: Introduction: Key Themes in Context of the Twentieth Century - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld and Chris O'Kane
SECTION 04: State, Economy, Society
Chapter 36: Society as “Totality”: On the negative-dialectical presentation of capitalist socialization - Lars Heitmann
Chapter 37: Society and Violence - Sami Khatib
Chapter 38: Society and History - José A. Zamora
Chapter 39: Totality and Technological Form - Samir Gandesha
Chapter 40: Materialism - Sebastian Truskolaski
Chapter 41: Theology and Materialism - Julia Jopp and Ansgar Martins
Chapter 42: Social Constitution and Class - Tom Houseman
Chapter 43: Critical Theory and Utopian Thought - Alexander Neupert-Doppler
Chapter 44: Praxis, Nature, Labour - Stefan Gandler
Chapter 45: Critical Theory and Epistemological and Social-Economical Critique - Frank Engster
Chapter 46: Critical Theory and the Critique of Political Economy: From Critical Political Economy to the Critique of Political Economy - Patrick Murray
Chapter 47: The Critique of Value and the Crisis of Capitalist Society - Josh Robinson
Chapter 48: The Frankfurt School and Fascism - Lars Fischer
Chapter 49: Society and Political Form - Alexander Neupert-Doppler
Chapter50: The Administered World - Hans-Ernst Schiller
Chapter 51: Commodity Form and the Form of Law - Andreas Harms
Chapter 52: Walter Benjamin’s Concept of Law - Amy Swiffen
Chapter 53: Security and Police - Mark Neocleous
Chapter 54: On the Authoritarian Personality - James Murphy
Chapter 55: Antisemitism and the Critique of Capitalism - Lars Fischer
Chapter 56: Race and the Politics of Recognition - Christopher Chen
Chapter 57: Society, Regression, Psychoanalysis, or ‘Capitalism Is Responsible for Your Problems with Your Girlfriend’: On the Use of Psychoanalysis in the Work of the Frankfurt School - Benjamin Y. Fong and Scott Jenkins
SECTION 05: Culture and Aesthetics
Chapter 58: The Culture Industry - Christian Lotz
Chapter 59: Erziehung: The Critical Theory of Education and Counter-Education - Matthew Charles
Chapter 60: Aesthetics and its Critique: The Frankfurt Aesthetic Paradigm - Johan Hartle
Chapter 61: Rather no art than socialist realism Adorno, Beckett and Brecht - Isabelle Klasen
Chapter 62: Adorno's Brecht: The Other Origin of Negative Dialectics - Matthias Rothe
Chapter 63: Critical Theory and Literary Theory - Mathias Nilges
Chapter 64: Cinema – Spectacle – Modernity - Johannes von Moltke
Chapter 65: On Music and Dissonance: Hinge - Murray Dineen
Chapter 66: Art, Technology, and Repetition - Marina Vishmidt
Chapter 67: On Ideology, Aesthetics, and Critique - Owen Hulatt
VOLUME 03: Contexts
Chapter 68: Introduction: Contexts of Critical Theory - Beverley Best, Werner Bonefeld, and Chris O’Kane
SECTION 06: Contexts of the emergence of Critical Theory
Chapter 69: Marx, Marxism, Critical Theory - Jan Hoff
Chapter 70: The Frankfurt School and Council Communism - Felix Baum
Chapter 71: Positivism - Anders Ramsay
Chapter 72: Critical Theory and the Sociology of Knowledge: Diverging Cultures of Reflexivity - Oliver Schlaudt
Chapter 73: Critical Theory and Weberian Sociology - Klaus Lichtblau
Chapter 74: Critical Theory and the Philosophy of Language - Philip Hogh
Chapter 75: Psychoanalysis and Critical Theory - Inara Luisa Marin
Chapter 76: Humanism and Anthropology from Walter Benjamin to Ulrich Sonnemann - Dennis Johannßen
Chapter 77: Art and Revolution - Jasper Bernes
SECTION 07: Contexts of the later developments of Critical Theory
Chapter 78: The Spectacle and the Culture Industry, the Transcendence of Art and the Autonomy of Art: Some Parallels between Theodor Adorno’s and Guy Debord’s Critical Concepts - Anselm Jappe
Chapter 79: Workerism and Critical Theory - Vincent Chanson and Frédéric Monferrand
Chapter 80: Open Marxism and Critical Theory: Negative Critique and Class as Critical Concept - Christos Memos
Chapter 81: Post-Marxism - Christian Lotz
Chapter 82: Critical Theory and Cultural Studies - Tom Bunyard
Chapter 83: Constellations of Critical Theory and Feminist Critique - Gudrun-Axeli Knapp
Chapter 84: Critical Theory and Recognition - Richard Gunn and Adrian Wilding
Chapter 85: 'Ideas with Broken Wings': Critical Theory and Postcolonial Theory - Asha Varadharajan
SECTION 08: ELEMENTS OF CRITICAL THEORY IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL AND POLITICAL MOVEMENTS AND THEORIES
SECTION 86: Biopolitics as a Critical Diagnosis - Frieder Vogelmann
Chapter 87: Critical International Relations Theory - Shannon Brincat
Chapter 88: Space, Form, and Urbanity - Greig Charnock
Chapter 89: Critical theory and the critique of anti-imperialism - Marcel Stoetzler
Chapter 90: Mass Culture and the Internet - Nick Dyer-Witheford
Chapter 91: Environmentalism and the Domination of Nature - Michelle Yates
Chapter 92: Feminist Critical Theory and the Problem of (Counter)Enlightenment in the Decay of Capitalist Patriarchy - Roswitha Scholz
Chapter 93: Gender and Social Reproduction - Amy De'Ath
Chapter 94: Rackets - Gerhard Scheit
Chapter 95: Subsumption and Crisis - Joshua Clover
Chapter 96: The Figure of Crisis in Critical Theory - Amy Chun Kim
Chapter 97: Neoliberalism: Critical Theory as Natural-History - Charles Prusik
Chapter 98: On Emancipation… - Sergio Tischler Visquerra and Alfonso Galileo García Vela
Chapter 99: Crisis and Immiseration: critical theory today - Aaron Benanav and John Clegg
Descriere
The
SAGE
Handbook
of
Frankfurt
School
Critical
Theory
expounds
the
development
of
critical
theory
from
its
founding
thinkers
to
its
contemporary
formulations
in
an
interdisciplinary
setting.