Description
Book SynopsisThis book outlines and contributes to the foundations of Marxist-humanist communication theory. It analyses the role of communication in capitalist society.
Engaging with the works of critical thinkers such as Erich Fromm, E. P. Thompson, Raymond Williams, Henri Lefebvre, Georg Lukács, Lucien Goldmann, Günther Anders, M. N. Roy, Angela Davis, C. L. R. James, Rosa Luxemburg, Eve Mitchell, and Cedric J. Robinson, the book provides readings of works that inform our understanding of how to critically theorise communication in society. The topics covered include the relationship of capitalism, racism, and patriarchy; communication and alienation; the base/superstructure-problem; the question of how one should best define communication; the political economy of communication; ideology critique; the connection of communication and struggles for alternatives.
Written for a broad audience of students and scholars interested in contemporary critical theory, this book will be usef
Trade Review
'In this volume, Christian Fuchs collected and partly updated his recently published articles analysing some key twentieth-century critical/Marxist contributions to the media and communication theory. His work makes an unparalleled contribution to the critical literature of communication studies by analysing, from a Marxist perspective, different dimensions and diverse contexts of mass communication, such as the base-superstructure relationship, human alienation, ideology, hegemony, and its reproductive power for capitalism and its contemporary forms and manifestations, such as authoritarianism, fascism, nationalism, and digital capitalism. A must-read for every critical scholar in the field.'
Slavko Splichal, University of Ljubljana
Table of Contents1. Introduction ; 2. Erich Fromm and the Critical Theory of Communication ; 3. Revisiting the Althusser/E. P. Thompson-Controversy: Towards a Marxist Theory of Communication ; 4. Raymond Williams’s Communicative Materialism ; 5. Henri Lefebvre’s Theory of the Production of Space and the Critical Theory of Communication ; 6. Towards A Critical Theory of Communication with Georg Lukács’s and Lucien Goldmann ; 7. Günther Anders’s Critical Theory of Technology ; 8. Jean-Paul Sartre as Critical Theorist of Communication. An Engagement with "Critique of Dialectical Reason" ; 9. M. N. Roy, Socialist Humanism, and the Critical Analysis of Communication ; 10. Capitalism, Racism, Patriarchy ; 11. Conclusion