Description

Book Synopsis

The retirement of the distinguished philosopher Jürgen Habermas from his chair at the University of Frankfurt signalled an important caesura in the history of Critical Theory: the transition from the Habermasian project, to different forms of inquiry in the work of the next generation. This change-over happens at a time when it has become clear that Habermas's systematic exploration of communicative rationality has reached the point where both its achievements and its limitations had become evident. The essays collected in this volume address the problems connected with this transition, partly by returning to the insights of the first generation (Adorno and Benjamin), partly by focusing on questions raised by Habermas's work. Whatever the difference in the authors' positions, this collection gains its unity through their common interest in the significance and value of Critical Theory today and in its future as a philosophical project.



Table of Contents

Preface

Section I: Introduction

Chapter 1. From the Eclipse of Reason to Communicative Rationality and Beyond
Peter Uwe Hohendahl

Section II: Adorno and Benjamin: Reemerging Questions of Epistemology, History, and Aesthetics

Chapter 2. Is Experience Still in Crisis? Reflections on a Frankfurt School Lament
Martin Jay

Chapter 3. Mega Melancholia: Adorno’s Minima Moralia
Eva Geulen

Chapter 4. Stumbling Into Modernity: Body and Soma in Adorno
Andrew Hewitt

Chapter 5. Aesthetic Politics Today: Walter Benjamin and Post-Fordist Culture
Lutz Koepnick

Section III: In the Wake of Jürgen Habermas: Communicative Reason, Morality, and History

Chapter 6. Critique and Self-Reflection: The Problematization of Morality
Christoph Menke

Chapter 7. Dialogical Rationality and the Critique of Absolute Autonomy
Brian Jacobs

Chapter 8. Civil Society in the Information Age: Beyond the Public Sphere
Jodi Dean

Chapter 9. Between Rights and Hospitality: Cosmopolitan Democracy, Nation, and Cultural Identity
Max Pensky

Chapter 10. A Question of Grounding: Reconstruction and Strict Reflexion in Habermas and Apel
Peter Dews

Section IV: A Contemporary Challenge to Critical Theory: Systems Theory

Chapter 11. Critical Theory and Systems Theory
Wolfram Malte Fues

Chapter 12. Observations on Observations: Some Remarks on Adorno’s Aesthetic Theory
Harro Müller

Section V: Epilogue

Chapter 13. Normativity and its Limits: Toward a Residual Ethics in Critical Theory
Jaimey Fisher

Bibliography
Index

Critical Theory: Current State and Future

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    A Hardback by Peter Uwe Hohendahl, Jaimey Fisher

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      View other formats and editions of Critical Theory: Current State and Future by Peter Uwe Hohendahl

      Publisher: Berghahn Books, Incorporated
      Publication Date: 01/06/2001
      ISBN13: 9781571812353, 978-1571812353
      ISBN10: 1571812350

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The retirement of the distinguished philosopher Jürgen Habermas from his chair at the University of Frankfurt signalled an important caesura in the history of Critical Theory: the transition from the Habermasian project, to different forms of inquiry in the work of the next generation. This change-over happens at a time when it has become clear that Habermas's systematic exploration of communicative rationality has reached the point where both its achievements and its limitations had become evident. The essays collected in this volume address the problems connected with this transition, partly by returning to the insights of the first generation (Adorno and Benjamin), partly by focusing on questions raised by Habermas's work. Whatever the difference in the authors' positions, this collection gains its unity through their common interest in the significance and value of Critical Theory today and in its future as a philosophical project.



      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Section I: Introduction

      Chapter 1. From the Eclipse of Reason to Communicative Rationality and Beyond
      Peter Uwe Hohendahl

      Section II: Adorno and Benjamin: Reemerging Questions of Epistemology, History, and Aesthetics

      Chapter 2. Is Experience Still in Crisis? Reflections on a Frankfurt School Lament
      Martin Jay

      Chapter 3. Mega Melancholia: Adorno’s Minima Moralia
      Eva Geulen

      Chapter 4. Stumbling Into Modernity: Body and Soma in Adorno
      Andrew Hewitt

      Chapter 5. Aesthetic Politics Today: Walter Benjamin and Post-Fordist Culture
      Lutz Koepnick

      Section III: In the Wake of Jürgen Habermas: Communicative Reason, Morality, and History

      Chapter 6. Critique and Self-Reflection: The Problematization of Morality
      Christoph Menke

      Chapter 7. Dialogical Rationality and the Critique of Absolute Autonomy
      Brian Jacobs

      Chapter 8. Civil Society in the Information Age: Beyond the Public Sphere
      Jodi Dean

      Chapter 9. Between Rights and Hospitality: Cosmopolitan Democracy, Nation, and Cultural Identity
      Max Pensky

      Chapter 10. A Question of Grounding: Reconstruction and Strict Reflexion in Habermas and Apel
      Peter Dews

      Section IV: A Contemporary Challenge to Critical Theory: Systems Theory

      Chapter 11. Critical Theory and Systems Theory
      Wolfram Malte Fues

      Chapter 12. Observations on Observations: Some Remarks on Adorno’s Aesthetic Theory
      Harro Müller

      Section V: Epilogue

      Chapter 13. Normativity and its Limits: Toward a Residual Ethics in Critical Theory
      Jaimey Fisher

      Bibliography
      Index

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