Intellectuals and the Crisis of ModernityState University of New York Press, 3. aug. 1993 - 222 sider This book explores the role of intellectuals in politics and social change from traditional society to the present. Its theoretical structure is based upon six distinct types of intellectual activity. The rise and decline of specific types is analyzed in the historical context of industrialization, technological change, shifting social forces, and the emergence of popular movements. |
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Side xii
... historical periods . Critical modes of thought are decisive , for without them no effective social transformation can occur . The challenge is truly Promethean - the recovery of collective subjectivity directed against deeply entrenched ...
... historical periods . Critical modes of thought are decisive , for without them no effective social transformation can occur . The challenge is truly Promethean - the recovery of collective subjectivity directed against deeply entrenched ...
Side 1
... historical actors . Classical debates around the political role of intellectuals never seem to have been resolved , as a survey of recent literature on the topic suggests . ' Theorists have , at various points , defined intellectuals as ...
... historical actors . Classical debates around the political role of intellectuals never seem to have been resolved , as a survey of recent literature on the topic suggests . ' Theorists have , at various points , defined intellectuals as ...
Side 3
... historical debut arrived with the French Revolution and whose political role in countries like the United States , Italy , and Russia was also decisive . Jacobinism entered into both the liberal and Marxist traditions despite a profound ...
... historical debut arrived with the French Revolution and whose political role in countries like the United States , Italy , and Russia was also decisive . Jacobinism entered into both the liberal and Marxist traditions despite a profound ...
Side 7
... historical reality means that development of critical social theory and counterhegemonic politics is intimately linked in new ways . " From a Gramscian standpoint , ideological hegemony refers to the capacity of dominant classes and ...
... historical reality means that development of critical social theory and counterhegemonic politics is intimately linked in new ways . " From a Gramscian standpoint , ideological hegemony refers to the capacity of dominant classes and ...
Side 9
... historical meaning of these movements . In modern society elite - centered technocratic discourse rests upon a shrunken public sphere with its narrow view of politics , participa- tion , and citizenship . The postmodern shift opens up ...
... historical meaning of these movements . In modern society elite - centered technocratic discourse rests upon a shrunken public sphere with its narrow view of politics , participa- tion , and citizenship . The postmodern shift opens up ...
Innhold
1 | |
11 | |
Intellectuals and the Marxist Tradition | 37 |
Modernity and the Transformation of Intellectuals | 63 |
The University Modernity and the Diffusion | 97 |
Technocratic Critical | 145 |
Intellectuals and the Collapse of Communism | 185 |
Index | 217 |
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