1st Edition
Dead Artists, Live Theories, and Other Cultural Problems
By Stanley Aronowitz
Copyright 1994
336 Pages
by
Routledge
336 Pages
by
Routledge
336 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
In these far-reaching essays, Stanley Aronvitz examines some of the crucial cultural shifts associated with the crisis of modernity and argues that art is a kind of social knowledge.
Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION: THE DEATH OF “ART”; Part 1 I AGAINST MODERNIST CULTURAL THEORY; Chapter 2 SO WHAT'S NEW? THE POSTMODERN PARADOX; Chapter 3 CRITIC AS STAR; Chapter 4 OPPOSITES DETRACT: SONTAG VERSUS BARTHES FOR BARTHES'S SAKE; Chapter 5 THE TENSIONS OF CRITICAL THEORY: IS NEGATIVE DIALECTICS ALL THERE IS?; Part 2 II LITERATURE AS SOCIAL KNOWLEDGE; Chapter 6 LITERATURE AS SOCIAL KNOWLEDGE: MIKHAIL BAKHTIN AND THE REEMERGENCE OF THE HUMAN SCIENCES; Chapter 7 BETWEEN CRITICISM AND ETHNOGRAPHY: RAYMOND WILLIAMS AND THE INTERVENTION OF CULTURAL STUDIES; Part 3 III CULTURAL POLITICS; Chapter 8 REFLECTIONS ON IDENTITY; Chapter 9 BIRTHRIGHTS; Chapter 10 PAULO FREIRE's RADICAL DEMOCRATIC HUMANISM; Chapter 11 THE POWER OF POSITIVE THINKING: JüRGEN HABERMAS IN AMERICA; Part 4 IV POLITICAL CULTURE; Chapter 12 THE DECLINE OF AMERICAN LIBERALISM; Chapter 13 PAST PERFECT; Chapter 14 SEEING GREEN; Chapter 15 IS DEMOCRACY POSSIBLE? THE DECLINE OF THE PUBLIC IN THE AMERICAN DEBATE Index;
Biography
Stanley Aronowitz