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Heideggerian Marxism PDF

261 Pages·2005·1.197 MB·English
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1 2 3 4 5 HeideggerianMarxism 6 7 8 9 10 11 [First Page] 12 [-1], (1) 13 14 15 Lines: 0 to 15 16 ——— 17 * 429.1755pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 * PgEnds: PageBreak 21 22 [-1], (1) 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagei/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 europeanhorizons 2 SeriesEditors 3 RichardGolsan, 4 TexasA&MUniversity 5 6 ChristopherFlood, 7 UniversityofSurrey 8 JeffreyT.Schnapp, 9 StanfordUniversity 10 11 RichardWolin, 12 TheGraduateCenter, [-2], (2) 13 CityUniversityofNewYork 14 15 Lines: 15 to 36 16 ——— 17 * 321.29399pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 * PgEnds: PageBreak 21 22 [-2], (2) 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageii/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 Heideggerian 4 5 6 7 Marxism 8 9 10 11 12 [-3], (3) 13 14 15 Lines: 36 to 71 16 ——— 17 Herbert Marcuse 0.78pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 * PgEnds: PageBreak 21 22 [-3], (3) 23 24 25 Edited by 26 RichardWolin and John Abromeit 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 university of nebraska press 37 lincoln and london Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageiii/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 ©2005bytheUniversityofNebraskaPress 2 Allrightsreserved ManufacturedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica 3 (cid:1)(cid:1) 4 TheessaysofHerbertMarcusecontainedinthisvolume 5 arereprintedwiththepermissionoftheLiteraryEstateofHerbertMarcuse PeterMarcuse,executor. 6 SupplementarymaterialfrompreviouslyunpublishedworkofHerbertMarcuse, 7 muchnowinthearchivesoftheJohannWolfgangGoetheUniversity 8 FrankfurtamMain, isbeingpublishedbyRoutledgeinasix-volumeserieseditedbyDouglasKellner. 9 Allrightstofurtherpublicationofthismaterialareretainedbytheestate. 10 “Heidegger’sPolitics:AnInterviewwithHerbertMarcuse”isreprinted 11 withthepermissionoftheGraduateFacultyPhilosophyJournal. 12 [-4], (4) SetinGaramond. 13 DesignedbyR.W.Boeche. 14 15 LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Lines: 71 to 154 Marcuse,Herbert,1898– 16 HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse; ——— 17 editedbyRichardWolinandJohnAbromeit. * 170.593pt PgVar 18 p.cm.–(Europeanhorizons) ——— Includesbibliographicalreferencesand(p.)index. Normal Page 19 isbn-13:978-0-8032-8312-1(pbk.:alk.paper) 20 isbn-10:0-8032-8312-1(pbk.:alk.paper) * PgEnds: PageBreak 1.Heidegger,Martin,1889–1976.2.Historicalmaterialism. 21 3.Dialecticalmaterialism.4.Socialism.5.Communism. 22 I.Wolin,Richard.II.Abromeit,John,1970–III.Title.IV.Series. [-4], (4) 23 b3279.h49m27322005 191–dc22 24 2005012975 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageiv/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 4 5 ForMartinJay 6 Inhonorofhissixtiethbirthday 7 8 9 10 11 12 [-5], (5) 13 14 15 Lines: 154 to 166 16 ——— 17 * 416.22151pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 * PgEnds: PageBreak 21 22 [-5], (5) 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagev/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 [-6], (6) 13 14 15 Lines: 166 to 168 16 ——— 17 0.0pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 PgEnds: TEX 21 22 [-6], (6) 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagevi/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 4 Contents 5 6 7 8 9 10 Preface ix 11 Introduction:WhatisHeideggerianMarxism? xi 12 [-7], (7) 13 1.ContributionstoaPhenomenology 14 ofHistoricalMaterialism 1 15 Lines: 168 to 262 16 2.OnConcretePhilosophy 34 ——— 17 * 42.38951pt PgVar 3.OntheProblemoftheDialectic 53 18 ——— Normal Page 19 4.NewSourcesontheFoundation 20 ofHistoricalMaterialism 86 * PgEnds: PageBreak 21 5.OnthePhilosophicalFoundationsofthe 22 [-7], (7) ConceptofLaborinEconomics 122 23 24 6.GermanPhilosophy,1871–1933 151 25 7.Heidegger’sPolitics:AnInterview 165 26 27 8.Postscript:MyDisillusionmentwithHeidegger 176 28 29 Glossary 177 30 Notes 191 31 32 PublicationHistory 223 33 Index 225 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pagevii/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 [-8], (8) 13 14 15 Lines: 262 to 266 16 ——— 17 0.0pt PgVar 18 ——— Normal Page 19 20 PgEnds: TEX 21 22 [-8], (8) 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageviii/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse 1 2 3 4 5 Preface 6 7 8 9 10 The idea for this volume evolved from a remarkable 1998 conference held at 11 the University of California, Berkeley, and organized by John Abromeit and 12 W. Mark Cobb in honor of Herbert Marcuse’s centennial. [-9], (9) 13 Forthe1960sgeneration,Marcusewasatoweringfigure—livingproofthat 14 theso-calledgenerationgapwas,inlargemeasure,amassmediafabrication. 15 Lines: 266 to 291 Unlike his Frankfurter School compagnons de route, Max Horkheimer and 16 Theodor Adorno, Marcuse remained remarkably open and receptive to con- ——— 17 13.5pt PgVar temporarypoliticaldevelopments.HorkheimerandAdorno’sskepticismvis-à- 18 ——— visthestudentmovementresultedfromtheircriticalassessmentofBolshevism Normal Page 19 asapotentandinsidiousformofpoliticaldomination.Theirassessmentwas 20 * PgEnds: Eject consistentwiththecriticismsoftheso-calledleftcommunistssuchasAnton 21 Pannekoek,HermannGörter,andRosaLuxemburg.Buttheirviewswerealso 22 [-9], (9) conditionedbyGermany’svulnerablegeopoliticalpositiononthefrontlinesof 23 thecoldwar.Marcuse,conversely,hadwitnessedfirsthandthepoliticalevilsof 24 McCarthyism,followedbyAmerica’sgrotesquemilitarybuild-upinVietnam, 25 in which the horrors of modern war—napalm and massive, indiscriminate 26 aerial bombardment—seemingly knew no bounds. 27 At the Berkeley conference, it was clear that John Abromeit and I shared 28 a profound interest in German philosophy of the 1920s, whose high points 29 were undoubtedly Georg Lukács’s History and Class Consciousness (1923) and 30 31 MartinHeidegger’sBeingandTime(1927).WhatmadeMarcuse’sintellectual 32 itinerarysouniquewasthat,ataremarkablyyoungage,heattemptedaland- 33 marksynthesisofbothtraditions:HegelianMarxismandexistentialontology. 34 Moreover,bothJohnandIfeltstronglythatMarcuse’scontributionswerenot 35 of merely “historical” value. Instead, we believed that his efforts to combine 36 these two orientations helped to shed important light on problems of the 37 philosophical-political present. Kim—UniversityofNebraskaPress/Pageix/ /HeideggerianMarxism/HerbertMarcuse

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