Thompson, Michael J.
The Palgrave Handbook of Critical Theory
1. Introduction: What Is Critical Theory?
Michael J. Thompson
Part I. The Hegelian-Marxist Roots of Critical Theory
2. Critical Theory and Resistance: On Antiphilosophy and the Philosophy of Praxis
Stephen Eric Bronner
3. Marx’s Influence on the Early Frankfurt School
Chad Kautzer
4. Lukács’ Theory of Reification and the Tradition of Critical Theory
Konstantinos Kavoulakos
5. Totality, Reason, Dialectics: The Importance of Hegel for Critical Theory from Lukács to Honneth
Omar Dahbour
6. Why Students of the Frankfurt School Will Have to Read Lukács
Andrew Feenberg
Part II. Critical Epistemology and the Aims of Social Research
7. Critical Theory and the Historical Transformations of Capitalist Modernity
Moishe Postone
8. Critical Theory as Radical Comparative–Historical Research
Harry F. Dahms
9. The Frankfurt School and the Critique of Instrumental Reason
Gregory Smulewicz-Zucker
10. Materialism in Critical Theory: Marx and the Early Horkheimer
David A. Borman
11. Critique as the Epistemic Framework of the Critical Social Sciences
Michael J. Thompson
Part III. The Sociology of Culture and Critical Aesthetics
12. Theories of Culture in the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory
Christoph Henning
13. Adorno’s
James Freeman
14. Art and the Concept of Autonomy in Adorno’s Kant Critique
Max Paddison
15. Judging by Refraining from Judgment: The Artwork and Its
Gerhard Richter
16. Aesthetics as the Precondition for Revolution
Dirk Michel-Schertges
17. What Does It Mean To Be Critical? On Literary and Social Critique in Walter Benjamin
Nathan Ross
Part IV. Critical Social Psychology and the Study of Authoritarianism
18. Theory and Class Consciousness
David Norman Smith
19. The Frankfurt School, Authority, and the Psychoanalysis of Utopia
C. Fred Alford
20. The Social Psychology of Critical Theory
Lauren Langman
21. The Social Psychology of Authority
Mark P. Worrell
22. The Fromm–Marcuse Debate and the Future of Critical Theory
Neil McLaughlin
Part V. The Communicative Turn, Discourse Ethics, and Recognition
23. The Metaethics of Critical Theories
Titus Stahl
24. Collective Agency and Intentionality: A Critical Theory Perspective
Barbara Fultner
25. Recognition, Social Systems and Critical Theory
Spyros Gangas
26. Recognition, Identity and Subjectivity
Heikki Ikäheimo
27. The Sociological Roots and Deficits of Axel Honneth’s Theory of Recognition
Mariana Teixeira
Part VI. Future Directions in Critical Theory
28. Experience and Temporality: Toward a New Paradigm of Critical Theory
Espen Hammer
29. Critical Theory of Human Rights
Lars Rensmann
30. Immanent Critique and the Exhaustion Thesis: Neoliberalism and History’s Vicissitudes
Robert J. Antonio
31. Critical Theory and Global Development
David Ingram
32. The New Sensibility, Intersectionality, and Democratic Attunement: The Future of Critical Theory and Humanity
Arnold Farr
Nyckelord: Political Science and International Relations, Political Theory, Political Sociology, Political Philosophy, Political History, Political Science, Social Philosophy
- Utgivare
- Thompson, Michael J.
- Utgivare
- Springer
- Utgivningsår
- 2017
- Språk
- en
- Utgåva
- 1
- Serie
- Political Philosophy and Public Purpose
- Sidantal
- 17 sidor
- Kategori
- Samhälle
- Format
- E-bok
- eISBN (PDF)
- 9781137558015
- Tryckt ISBN
- 978-1-137-55800-8