Marcuse and Benhabib / political economy
Bryan N. Alexander
bnalexan at umich.edu
Mon, 14 Apr 1997 00:14:51 -0400 (EDT)
As someone who has failed in nothing except working himself to
near-collapse in an accursed and dwindling job market, I have failed in
nothing except not having had the TIME to do so. Please tell us something
of what we're missing, o Trickster.
On Sun, 13 Apr 1997, Robert Johnson wrote:
>
> On Sat, 12 Apr 1997, Bryan N. Alexander wrote:
>
> > For a link between economics and theory, I think we might look to what
> > theorists are doing with chaos. Chaos gets applied to economics all the
> > time (pretty usefully, too); and the notion of fractal reality seems
> > especially useful to the consensus-social-reality crowd, from Negri to
> > Deleuze (and I think Habermas, when I'm being generous).
> >
> > On Sat, 12 Apr 1997, kenneth.mackendrick wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > I was wondering, does anyone know, or think, that Seyla Benhabib's critical theory
> > > - especially her two essays "the generalized and the concrete other" and "in the
> > > shadow of aristotle and hegel" is a reading of habermas through marcuse? Instead
> > > of Hegel - is the notion of an anticipatory utopia and a critical diagnostic more from
> > > marcuse's _reason and revolution_ than a reformulated critique of
> > > habermas's neo-kantianism?
> > >
> > > Furthermore - I recently read an interview with Axel Honneth who maintained that a
> > > third generation of critical theorists has yet to emerge - since such a generation
> > > could only claim frankfurt school ties if they continued with the project of an
> > > ideology-critique of political economy. so despite the many essays and books
> > > which argue that we need to go "back to adorno" (like robert hullot-kenter, deborah
> > > cook, j.m. bernstein, jack zipes, jameson, etc.) is anyone actually working on
> > > detailed connections between critical theory and economics? most of my research
> > > has centered around habermas's discourse ethics or his legal theory - does
> > > anyone have any references for decent critiques of political economy - which
> > > directly addresses issues of transnational capitalism, the money markets,
> > > stockmarket speculation, the tax system, systemic violence, poverty etc?
> > >
> > > thanks,
> > > ken
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > Bryan Alexander Department of English
> > email: bnalexan@umich.edu University of Michigan
> > phone: (313) 764-0418 Ann Arbor, MI USA 48105
> > fax: (313) 763-3128 http://www.umich.edu/~bnalexan
> >
>
>
>
> Friends...
>
> If you do not think that a "progressive" generation of
> critical theorist has emerged....
>
> Then you have failed to read the work of Douglas Kellner.
>
>
>
> Coyote
>
>
>
Bryan Alexander Department of English
email: bnalexan@umich.edu University of Michigan
phone: (313) 764-0418 Ann Arbor, MI USA 48105
fax: (313) 763-3128 http://www.umich.edu/~bnalexan