Marcuse's Publications - Herbert Marcuse Official Website.
The struggle against liberalism in the totalitarian view of the state.--The concept of essence.--The affirmative character of culture.--Philosophy and critical theory.--On hedonism.--Industrialization and capitalism in the work of Max Weber.--Love mystified; a critique of Norman O. Brown and a reply to Herbert Marcuse by Norman O. Brown.--Aggressiveness in advanced industrial society.
Negations: Essays in Critical Theory: Professor Herbert Marcuse, Steffen G Bohm, Dr Jeremy J Shapiro: 9781906948047: Books - Amazon.ca.
Contains several works of the 1920-1930's when Marcuse was Heidegger's student. (English) Collected Papers of Herbert Marcuse, ed. Douglas Kellner, London: Routledge, 1998-2012. Vol. 1, Technology, War and Fascism, 1998, 278 pp. Vol. 2, Towards a Critical Theory of Society, 2001. Vol. 3, Foundation of the Left and the 1960s, 2005.
Author: Herbert Marcuse Herbert Marcuse’s Negations is both a radical critique of capitalist modernity and a model of materialist dialectical thinking. In a series of essays, originally written in the period stretching from the 1930s to 1960s, Marcuse takes up the presupposed categories that have,and continue to, ground thought and action in our administered society: liberalism.
Genealogy profile for Dr. Herbert Hermann Marcuse. Written with Robert Paul Wolff and Barrington Moore, Jr. Negations: Essays in Critical Theory (1968) An Essay on Liberation (1969) Counterrevolution and Revolt (1972) ISBN 978-0-8070-1533-9 The Aesthetic Dimension: Toward a Critique of Marxist Aesthetics (1978) ISBN 978-0-8070-1519-3 Five Lectures (1969) Essays. Repressive Tolerance(28.
While a member of the Institute of Societal Research, Marcuse developed a model for critical social theory, created a theory of the new stage of state and monopoly capitalism, described the relationships between philosophy, social theory, and cultural criticism, and provided an analysis and critique of German fascism. Marcuse worked closely with critical theorists while at the Institute.
Marcuse took up this notion, and in fact, a collection of his essays is entitled Negations. There are two Marcusian terms which must be understood in order to make sense of the theory. First, the transcendent critical principle (TCP), and secondly, the revolutionary a priori.