Description

Book Synopsis

Technology often plays an ambiguous role in theories of social change. Viewed by Karl Marx as the driving force of historical progress, it has come to be associated with exploitation and alienation, thanks in large part to the work of Frankfurt School critical theorists such as Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer.

Andrew Feenberg is an unusual figure: a critical theorist with an essentially optimistic view of technology. His concept of ‘technical politics’ puts technology design at the heart of disputes over the future shape of society. This book provides the first sustained critique of Feenberg’s work, describing how it has developed from the tradition of Marx and Marcuse and analysing the key ideas of formal bias, ambivalence, progressive rationalisation and primary and secondary instrumentalisation.

Identifying the limitations resulting from Feenberg’s attachment to critique, the book offers a utopian corrective that can provide a fuller account of the process of willed technological transformation and of the author’s own idea of a technologically authorised socialism.



Table of Contents

Introduction: from critical theory to technical politics
1 Critical theory and technology
2 The theory of bias and the ethics of technology design
3 Technical politics
4 Aesthetic critique
5 From critique to utopia
Beyond critique: utopia

References
Index

Technical Politics: Andrew Feenberg’s Critical

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    A Hardback by Graeme Kirkpatrick

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      View other formats and editions of Technical Politics: Andrew Feenberg’s Critical by Graeme Kirkpatrick

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 12/05/2020
      ISBN13: 9781526105325, 978-1526105325
      ISBN10: 1526105322

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Technology often plays an ambiguous role in theories of social change. Viewed by Karl Marx as the driving force of historical progress, it has come to be associated with exploitation and alienation, thanks in large part to the work of Frankfurt School critical theorists such as Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer.

      Andrew Feenberg is an unusual figure: a critical theorist with an essentially optimistic view of technology. His concept of ‘technical politics’ puts technology design at the heart of disputes over the future shape of society. This book provides the first sustained critique of Feenberg’s work, describing how it has developed from the tradition of Marx and Marcuse and analysing the key ideas of formal bias, ambivalence, progressive rationalisation and primary and secondary instrumentalisation.

      Identifying the limitations resulting from Feenberg’s attachment to critique, the book offers a utopian corrective that can provide a fuller account of the process of willed technological transformation and of the author’s own idea of a technologically authorised socialism.



      Table of Contents

      Introduction: from critical theory to technical politics
      1 Critical theory and technology
      2 The theory of bias and the ethics of technology design
      3 Technical politics
      4 Aesthetic critique
      5 From critique to utopia
      Beyond critique: utopia

      References
      Index

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