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Critical Theory

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We surrender to mass media produced fall needs. We have no cultural alternatives. ... can provide the grounding for the ultimate norms that govern our lives and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Critical Theory


1
Critical Theory
2
The Frankfurt School
  • Associated with the Institute of Social Research
    at the University of Frankfurt in Germany in
    1923.
  • Key Theorists Max Horkheimer (1895-1973),
    Theodor Adorno (1903-1969), Herbert Marcuse
    (1898-1979) and Erich Fromm (1900-1980)

3
To the U.S.
  • All of the key theorists came from middle class
    Jewish backgrounds. All fled Germany for America
    by the mid 1930s.
  • Later Adorno and Horkheimer returend to Germany
    and re-established the Institute in 1949.
  • Over time the group diverged.

4
Understanding Critical Theory- The Centrality of
Class
  • As a derivative of Marxism, studies of class and
    class movements were central. In addition to the
    continuing changes wrought by industrialization,
    and today post-industrialization (shift to
    service sector economy) that significantly
    impacted the standard of living of many.

5
The Critiques of Critical Theory
  • Criticisms of Marxian Theory
  • Criticisms of Positivism
  • Criticisms of Sociology
  • Critique of Modern Society
  • Critique of Culture

6
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7
Understanding Critical Theory
  • Two Propositions
  • 1) People are a product of the society in which
    they live. Hence this implies that their is no
    such thing as an objective fact that can be known
    outside of structure.
  • 2) Intellectuals should not try to be objective
    and separate value judgments from their work

8
Cultural Analysis
  • Critical Theory applied theory to culture. It is
    a harbinger of Cultural Studies.

9
Whats Different About Critical Theory?
  • The magpie approach of blending pieces for a
    range of theories is a noteworthy shift.
  • This consumption of multiple theories in some
    ways mirrors the mass culture that critical
    theory critiques.
  • Is this irony problematic for critical theorists?

10
Do Knowledge and Truth Exist?
  • For a critical theorist, knowledge and truth do
    exist. Not all critical attitudes are equal.
  • However, one must recognize that ones own work
    is not objective, but a product of a person
    limited by time and location.
  • The normative approach of critical theory brings
    one closer to truth and knowledge than positivist
    social science.

11
Marxist Influences
  • The Dialectical Method -Studies patterns of inner
    conflict. Each system contains within it a
    series of contradictions that eventually
    overburden the system and led to its
    destruction.
  • Importance of societys economic organization
  • Critique of class relations

12
Areas of Study
  • Culture, Personality, and the Administered
    Society
  • The Critique of Mass Culture
  • Rationalization and Communicative Action
  • Evolution and Crisis
  • Rationalization and the Lifeworld
  • Reason and Rationalization

13
Culture, Personality and the Administered Society
  • Materialist perspective- ie. Fascism is rooted in
    capitalism.
  • However, the bulk of work focuses on aspects of
    personality, culture, and thought, not social
    institutions.
  • Analyses focus on the ways that the economic
    system distorts personality.

14
Culture, Personality and the Administered
Society- Two Examples
  • Adorno, in The Authoritarian Personality-
    demonstrates how prejudice is more likely to
    occur in those raised in authoritarian
    environments.
  • Fromm expands Marxs alienation to examine
    creativity and identity. Modern man has
    everything a car, a house, a job, kids, a
    marriage, problems, troubles, satisfactions He
    is nothing

15
The Critique of Mass Culture
  • Culture and ideology as a semi-autonomous realm
    (Different from Marx)
  • Culture, especially mass culture, operates to
    maintain and strengthen the existing order.
  • Popular culture is a means of manipulating
    inhabitants of a totally administered society.

16
Examples of the Mass Culture Critique
  • Adorno- attacked Jazz and popular music for being
    standardized and distracting them/passifying.
    (Im a rebel because I listen to rock and roll)
  • Adorno- attacked astrology as operating to
    reproduce the social order.
  • Marcuse- One Dimensional Man- technical progress
    has made possible a system of domination and
    coordination that defeats all protest. We
    surrender to mass media produced fall needs. We
    have no cultural alternatives.

17
Rationalization and Communicative Action- Habermas
  • Role of individuals perceptions in maintaining
    or realizing social change
  • Evolution and Crisis- Habermas identifies a
    number of social formations
  • Builds on Marxs dialectic but he focuses on the
    role of ideas and consciousness.
  • Tackles the problem of legitimacy. Why are some
    orders recognized and others are not.

18
Liberal Capitalism and the Depoliticization of
Class
  • Prior to liberal capitalism, relations are clear.
    The control of the state by a small group was
    of central importance.
  • Under capitalism, a cumulative process of
    rationalization occurs. There is a shift from
    the sacred to the secular.
  • How validity claims are made shifts from myth,
    religion, philosophy to ideology.
  • Legitimation crisis is inevitable as
    contradictions of capitalism undermine
    legitimation.

19
Rationalization and the Lifeworld
  • Lifeworld- how evolutionary change is actually
    experienced by individuals (Habermas).
    Rationalization changes what our taken for
    granted lifeworld is.

20
Reason and Rationalization
21
Reason and Rationalization
  • The order can be rational without rationalized.
  • Habermas argues that one can provide the
    grounding for the ultimate norms that govern our
    lives and thereby replace the void left by
    modernitys disenchantment.

22
Legitimation Crisis and Flint Michigan
  • Economic crisis- How does the economic situation
    in Flint Michigan exemplify Habermas Ideas?

23
The Example of Walter Benjamin
  • Benjamin argues that the shift to the mechanical
    production of art undermines its revolutionary
    potential.
  • Benjamin theorizes that the changes in perception
    and how we perceive reflects social
    transformations.
  • To an ever greater degree the work of art
    reproduced becomes the work of art designed for
    reproducibility.

24
The Culture of Fear and Fascism
  • How does the culture of fear fit into Benjamins
    analysis?

25
Benjamin on the Dangers of Fascism
  • Fascism- A system of government that exercises a
    dictatorship of the extreme right, typically
    through the merging of state and business
    leadership together with belligerent nationalism.
  • Spectacle and Fascism-
  • The formation of masses are two aspects of the
    same process- fascism and false self-expression
  • All efforts to render politics aesthetic
    culminate in one thing War.
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