Description
Book SynopsisWard's book focuses on the work of the Hungarian philosopher Agnes Heller; prominent member of the Budapest School, a group of students who studied under the Marxist social theorist György Lukács. For both Marx and Heller (albeit in different ways) dissatisfaction emerges as the inevitable result of the expansion of need(s) within modernity and as a catalyst for the development of anthropological wealth (what Marx refers to as the ''human being rich in need''). Ward argues that dissatisfaction and the corresponding category of human wealthas both motif and methodis central to grasping Heller's seemingly disparate writings. While Marx postulates a radical overcoming of dissatisfaction, Heller argues dissatisfaction is integral not only to the on-going survival of modernity but also to the dynamics of both freedom and individual life. In this way Heller's work remains committed to a position that both continually returns and departs, is both with and against, the philosophy of Marx.This
Trade ReviewThis is an important book. Scholars of Agnes Heller’s work will find it exceptionally illuminating. Theorists who would utilize the succession of critical theory that runs from Marx through Lukács and the Budapest School will find in it a treatment of Heller’s distinctive critical theory previously unavailable in any literature. More urgently, this study is so important because as Ward identifies Heller’s array of interpretative tools, she also employs them in an argument which ends up placing Heller’s Marx on the developmental spectrum of modern liberalism . . . Ward is an adept guide into Heller’s thinking and forceful interlocutor for those who are already taken up with it. Her book is mandatory reading for anyone interested in Heller and in alternatives to the Frankfurt line of critical theory. It will prove valuable also for those concerned with how, as Marx intended, the ideological trappings of freedom might cease to stand against the free development of individual personalities and collaborative alliances. * Thesis Eleven *
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Agnes Heller with and Against Marx Chapter One: The Theory of Need in Marx Chapter Two: Agnes Heller: Marx as Problem and Promise Chapter Three: Heller’s Anthropology of Affects and Feelings Chapter Four: Everyday Life and Values Chapter Five: A Theory of Modernity: Dissatisfaction and Critique Chapter Six: A Theory of Rationality Chapter Seven: Political Modernity and the Problem of Justice Chapter Eight: The Good Life Beyond Duty Conclusion: The Good Life and Human Wholeness