Seminar in Frankfurt School Critical
Theory Andrew Feenberg
This course introduces Frankfurt School Critical Theory through
the writings of Benjamin, Horkheimer, Adorno, Marcuse, and Habermas. The course
also includes background readings in Marx and Lukács. The course presupposes
some knowledge of Marx’s work and the philosophical tradition. If you do not know Marx, at the very least
read Marx and Engels' Communist Manifesto carefully to get an idea what
you’ve been missing. A minimal acquaintance with modern philosophy (Descartes
to Kant) will be very helpful. I will lecture on the philosophical background
and the more difficult texts.
The course has six parts, as follows:
Part I: The Marxist Background. The first assignment consists of
Marx’s early “Manuscripts of 1844” and Marcuse’s interpretation of this text. We
will read next a selection from the founding text of Western Marxism, Lukacs's History and Class Consciousness, followed by Horkheimer’s classic
introduction to Critical Theory.
Part II: The Fate of Enlightenment. The second part
of the course includes several texts by Marcuse on individuality and science followed
by the first chapter of Horkheimer
and Adorno's Dialectic of Enlightenment.
Part III: On Art. This section includes classic articles on art by
Benjamin and Marcuse. The selection brings together Benjamin’s theory of the
aura and his rather open view of mass culture and Marcuse’s critique of
bourgeois culture.
Part IV: Mass Culture. This section includes the chapter on the
culture industry from Dialectic of
Enlightenment. This text is famous
for its radical rejection of mass culture. This section and the previous one
offer an introduction to the approach of the Frankfurt School to the
understanding of the relation of high to mass culture.
Part V: The Public Sphere. This part of the course is based on a
reading of Habermas’s early book on The
Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. The aim of this section of
the course is to explore the relevance of the Frankfurt School to theories of
democratic politics and mass society. This section concludes with an essay by
Marcuse that addresses the strategic implications of the decline of the public
sphere.
Part VI: On Revolution. The course concludes with a reading of two
texts by Marcuse written under the influence of the New Left.
I will give some lectures on these texts, but at least half the
class time will be spent in discussions based on short written
questions/comments you will prepare each week on the readings. The requirements
of the course also include a research paper on a topic of your choice related
to the course.
In addition to our face to face class meetings, we will hold an
online seminar for one month beginning in week five with the discussion of art.
I will explain how we will use the online seminar in the first class.
I will hold office hours in the afternoon of the day of our class.
My office is in HC 3598. My email is Feenberg@sfu.ca. You are welcome to make
an appointment outside the regular office hours.
Recommended
Reading: Martin Jay's The Dialectical Imagination is a good introduction to the Frankfurt
School. Marshall Berman’s All That is Solid Melts into Air is an
excellent introduction to the general problem of modernity in social thought.
Assigned books:
M. Horkheimer and T. Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment (Stanford)
Feenberg and Leiss, The Essential Marcuse (Beacon)
J. Habermas, The Structural Transformation of the
Public Sphere (MIT)
Writings of the Young Marx on Politics
and Philosophy, edited
by L. Easton and K. Guddat (Doubleday).
Course Syllabus
Readings:
Part One: Marxist Background
Week
1
Marx, “Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts”
Marcuse,
“The Foundations of Historical Materialism”
Week
2
Lukács,
“Reification and the Consciousness of the Proletariat, Part I”
Horkheimer,
“Traditional and Critical Theory”
Part Two: The Fate of
Enlightenment
Week
3-4
Marcuse,
“The Individual in the Great Society”
Marcuse,
“Remarks on a Redefinition of Culture”
Adorno
and Horkheimer, Dialectic of Enlightenment:
“Preface,”
Adorno
and Horkheimer, Dialectic of
Enlightenment: “The Concept of Enlightenment”
Part Three: On Art
Week
5
Benjamin,
“The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”
Marcuse,
“The Affirmative Character of Culture”
Part Four: Mass Culture
Week
6
Adorno
and Horkheimer, “Enlightenment As Mass Deception”
Adorno,
“The Culture Industry Reconsidered”
Part Five: The Public Sphere
Week
7-8
Habermas,
“The Structural Transformation of the
Public Sphere”
Week
9
Marcuse,
“Repressive Tolerance”
Part Six: On Revolution
Week
10
Marcuse,
An Essay on Liberation
Marcuse,
“Nature and Revolution”