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Critical Theory Why “critical theory”? Critical of what?  Current social conditions  Standard social science.

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Presentation on theme: "Critical Theory Why “critical theory”? Critical of what?  Current social conditions  Standard social science."— Presentation transcript:

1 Critical Theory Why “critical theory”? Critical of what?  Current social conditions  Standard social science

2 Institute for Social Research (“Frankfurt School”) Established in 1921 Foci: Marxist studies and problem of anti- Semitism Exile; Institute at Columbia U.

3 Interests of Critical Theorists Critical Marxism Alienation and domination False consciousness of proletariat

4 Major Ideas of Critical Theorists Subjective vs. objective reason Rejection of positivism Social analysis for social emancipation Role of consumption in modern society Concept of reification

5 Major Ideas of Critical Theorists Influence of Freud  “social unconscious”  concept of repression  role of family in reproduction of class structure Stages of capitalism Interest in culture

6 Major Ideas of Critical Theorists Herbert Marcuse  surplus repression and the “great refusal”  sexual liberation as path to social emancipation

7 Critique of Critical Theory Orthodox Marxist view: attention to culture is distraction; should stay focused on economic issues Critical theorists: base/superstructure model is flawed; economy and culture are deeply interconnected

8 Jürgen Habermas (1929- ) Grew up under Nazism Graduate work in philosophy Main focus: transform critical theory into positive approach Interest in language and communication  Distorted communication  Undistorted communication

9 Habermas Weberian concern with penetration of instrumental rationality into all areas of social life Solution: “ideal speech situation” Characteristics:  Open to all  Equal rights of expression  Rationality will prevail

10 Habermas Public sphere: realm of deliberation, situated between economy and state (civil society) Decline of public sphere in late capitalism Example: rise of media conglomerates

11 Critiques of Habermas Assumptions about human nature and motivations Ideal speech situation is utopian Postmodern critique: misplaced faith in rationality

12 Habermas’s Vision of Future Optimism (cf. Marx) Contrast to Weber, other critical theorists

13 “What Does a Crisis Mean Today? Legitimation Problems in Late Capitalism” Question: Is capitalism still threatened by crisis? Features of late capitalism:  Economic competition replaced by oligarchies  State intervention in economy  Legitimation system (formal democracy w/o real participation)  Traditional classes less important

14 “What Does a Crisis Mean Today? Legitimation Problems in Late Capitalism” 3 global crises of late capitalism:  Environmental crisis  Alienation  Nuclear annihilation Role of state and possible crisis  Output crisis (efficiency crisis)  Input crisis (legitimation crisis)

15 “What Does a Crisis Mean Today? Legitimation Problems in Late Capitalism” Role of culture Cultural traditions made relative and political “Colonization of the lifeworld”  alienation Declining sense of meaning

16 “What Does a Crisis Mean Today? Legitimation Problems in Late Capitalism” Motivation crisis  Declining belief in performance ideology  Vague individual preferences  Declining importance of exchange value orientation Main point: crisis still inherent in capitalism, takes a new form under late capitalism

17 In-Class Writing According to Dandaneau, why didn’t the deindustrialization of Flint in the 1970s and 1980s result in a worker uprising? (Think about Habermas’s ideas about late capitalism and how it differs from the kind of capitalism Marx wrote about.)

18 Discussion of Roger & Me Reification and false consciousness Ideological framing of deindustrialization by those aligned with power Economic problems displaced into the political/governmental sphere Motivation crisis Colonization of the lifeworld (see Dandaneau pp. 243-9)


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