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Description
Using the historical-materialist method to unravel the promise and limits of critical practice since the Revolutionary Age, John E. O’Brien investigates the problems and prospects of cultural criticism for the 21st century through absorbing studies of the contested perspectives of Voltaire, Friedrich Schiller, Jean Baudrillard, Michel Foucault, Terry Eagleton and Hayden White.

In spite of recurrent crises due to a flawed Western political-economy, why is there so much critical intellectual activity with so little effect? Framing his study with the early work by Max Horkheimer, Luc Boltanski and Teresa Ebert, O’Brien's investigation of resistance in America and Europe challenges the bourgeois philosophy of history, pointing to the urgency of critique as mode of analysis and intervention.
John E. O'Brien, Ph.D. (1971), University of Wisconsin, formerly Professor of Sociology and Urban Studies, Portland State University, Oregon, now independent researcher in Paris, with projects on the European Community and India, where he lectures on Systems Management in a Global Political Economy.
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Publication date: March 3, 2015

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Overview

1. What is Critical Practice?

2. Voltaire: Setting the Role of Public Intellectual

3. Schiller: Reform Consciousness to Change the World

4. Foucault: The End of Evasion

5. Jean Baudrillard: Critical Practice as Core Extraction

6. Eagleton: Literary Critic – Literature or Criticism?

7. Hayden White: Historic Truth as Story Telling

8. Liberation: Project, Method, Object

Appendix: Technical Note
References
Index

Series

Part of the Studies in Critical Social Sciences series.

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