Preface, Acknowledgments, Introduction, Part One History and History of Ideas, 1. Contribution to a Critique of Critical Theory, 2. The Frankfurt School in New York, 3. The Idea of Critical Theory, 4. The Dialectical Imagination by Martin Jay, Part Two Philosophy, 5. The Frankfurt School and Critical Theory, 6. Critique of Reason from Max Weber to Jlirgen Habermas, 7. Irrationalism of the Left, 8. Reason or Revolution?, 9. The Frankfurt School: An Autobiographical Note, Part Three Aesthetics, 10. On Walter Benjamin, 11. Lukács and Horkheimer: The Place of Aesthetics in Horkheimer’s Thought, 12. Negative Philosophy of Music: Positive Results, 13. Autonomy of Art: Looking Back at Adorno’s Ästhetische Theorie, Part Four Sociology and Social Psychology, 14. Critical Theory and Dialectics, 15. The Struggle of Reason against Total Bureaucratization, 16. The Positivist Dispute in Retrospect, 17. The Uses of Psychoanalysis in Critical Theory and Structuralism, 18. Partisan Truth: Knowledge and Social Classes in Critical Theory, Part Five Political Science and Political Economy, 19. The Political Contradictions in Adorno’s Critical Theory, 20. The Anti-Semitism Studies of the Frankfurt School: The Failure of Critical Theory, 21. Political Economy and Critical Theory, Part Six Marxism, 22. The Frankfurt School, 23. From Hegel to Marcuse, 24. Understanding Marcuse, 25. The Limits of Praxis in Critical Theory, About the Contributors, Index
-Recent years have seen a wave of readers on the subject of the
research and social philosophizing of those scholars who are now
conveniently grouped under the label of the Frankfurt School, or
Critical Theory. The Marcus and Tar book adds to this a selection
of comments and critiques originally published in different
American, German, and Italian books and journals in the 1970s. The
articles are organized into six sections under the traditional
headings of history/history of ideas, philosophy, aesthetics,
sociology and social psychology, political science and political
economy, and Marxism. . . . [Provides] a reprint of historical
debates on one of the most remarkable developments in the history
of ideas in this century.- --Peter A. Bruck, Contemporary
Sociology
"Recent years have seen a wave of readers on the subject of the
research and social philosophizing of those scholars who are now
conveniently grouped under the label of the Frankfurt School, or
Critical Theory. The Marcus and Tar book adds to this a selection
of comments and critiques originally published in different
American, German, and Italian books and journals in the 1970s. The
articles are organized into six sections under the traditional
headings of history/history of ideas, philosophy, aesthetics,
sociology and social psychology, political science and political
economy, and Marxism. . . . [Provides] a reprint of historical
debates on one of the most remarkable developments in the history
of ideas in this century." --Peter A. Bruck, Contemporary
Sociology
"Recent years have seen a wave of readers on the subject of the
research and social philosophizing of those scholars who are now
conveniently grouped under the label of the Frankfurt School, or
Critical Theory. The Marcus and Tar book adds to this a selection
of comments and critiques originally published in different
American, German, and Italian books and journals in the 1970s. The
articles are organized into six sections under the traditional
headings of history/history of ideas, philosophy, aesthetics,
sociology and social psychology, political science and political
economy, and Marxism. . . . [Provides] a reprint of historical
debates on one of the most remarkable developments in the history
of ideas in this century." --Peter A. Bruck, Contemporary Sociology
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