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Culture industry

The term culture industry (German: Kulturindustrie) was coined by the critical theorists Theodor Adorno (1903–1969) and Max Horkheimer (1895–1973), and was presented as critical vocabulary in the chapter "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception",[1] of the book Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947), wherein they proposed that popular culture is akin to a factory producing standardized cultural goods—films, radio programmes, magazines, etc.—that are used to manipulate mass society into passivity.[2] Consumption of the easy pleasures of popular culture, made available by the mass communications media, renders people docile and content, no matter how difficult their economic circumstances.[2] The inherent danger of the culture industry is the cultivation of false psychological needs that can only be met and satisfied by the products of capitalism; thus Adorno and Horkheimer perceived mass-produced culture as especially dangerous compared to the more technically and intellectually difficult high arts. In contrast, true psychological needs are freedom, creativity, and genuine happiness, which refer to an earlier demarcation of human needs, established by Herbert Marcuse.[3]

The Frankfurt School edit

Members of The Frankfurt School were much influenced by the dialectical materialism and historical materialism of Karl Marx, as well as the revisitation of the dialectical idealism of Hegel; both events are studied not in isolation, but as part of the process of change. As a group later joined by Jürgen Habermas, they were responsible for the formulation of critical theory. In works such as Dialectic of Enlightenment and Negative Dialectics, Adorno and Horkheimer theorized that the phenomenon of mass culture has a political implication, namely that all the many forms of popular culture are parts of a single culture industry whose purpose is to ensure the continued obedience of the masses to market interests.

The theory edit

The essay is concerned with the production of cultural content in capitalist societies. It critiques the extortionate nature of cultural economies as well as the apparently inferior products of the system.[4] Horkheimer and Adorno argue that mass-produced entertainment aims, by its very nature, to appeal to vast audiences and therefore both the intellectual stimulation of high art and the basic release of low art.[5] The essay does not suggest that all products of this system are inherently inferior, simply that they have replaced other forms of entertainment without properly fulfilling the important roles played by the now-defunct sources of culture.[6]

Horkheimer and Adorno make consistent comparisons between Fascist Germany and the American film industry. They highlight the presence of mass-produced culture, created and disseminated by exclusive institutions and consumed by a passive, homogenised audience in both systems.[7] This illustrates the logic of domination in post-enlightenment modern society, by monopoly capitalism or the nation state.[8] Horkheimer and Adorno draw attention to the problems associated with a system that 'integrates its consumers from above', arguing that in attempting to realise enlightenment values of reason and order, the holistic power of the individual is undermined.[9]

Influences edit

Adorno and Horkheimer's work was influenced by both the broader socio-political environment in which it was written and by other major theorists. Written in California in the early 1940s in an era which characterized them as two ethnically Jewish, German émigrés, The Culture Industry is influenced by European politics and the war by which the continent was consumed.[10] Simultaneously, the American film industry was characterised by an unprecedented level of studio monopolisation,[4] it was "Hollywood at its most classical, American mass culture at its most Fordist".[11]

Horkheimer and Adorno were influenced heavily by major developers of social, political and economic theory,[12] most notably:

Elements edit

Anything made by a person is a materialization of their labour and an expression of their intentions. There will also be a use value: the benefit to the consumer will be derived from its utility.[14][15] Yet, the modern soap operas with their interchangeable plots and formulaic narrative conventions reflect standardized production techniques and the falling value of a mass-produced cultural product.[1]

Only rarely is a film released that makes a more positive impression on the general discourse and achieves a higher exchange value, e.g. Patton (1970), starring George C. Scott as the eponymous American general, was released at a time of considerable anti-war sentiment. The opening shot is of Patton in front of an American flag making an impassioned speech. This was a form of dialectic in which the audience could identify with the patriotism either sincerely (the thesis) or ironically (the antithesis) and so set the tone of the interpretation for the remainder of the film. However, the film is manipulating specific historical events, not only as entertainment, but also as a form of propaganda by demonstrating a link between success in strategic resource management situations and specified leadership qualities. Given that the subtext was instrumental and not "value-free", ethical and philosophical considerations arise.[citation needed]

Normally, only high art criticizes the world outside its boundaries, but access to this form of communication is limited to the elite classes where the risks of introducing social instability are slight. A film like Patton is popular art which intends controversy in a world of social order and unity which, according to Adorno, is regressing into a cultural blandness. To Hegel, order is good a priori, i.e. it does not have to answer to those living under it.[citation needed] Marx's theory of Historical Materialism was teleological, i.e. society follows through a dialectic of unfolding stages from ancient modes of production to feudalism to capitalism to a future communism. But Adorno felt that the culture industry would never permit a sufficient core of challenging material to emerge on to the market that might disturb the status quo.[16]

Mass culture edit

A center point of the Dialectic of Enlightenment is the topic of "the Enlightenment as Mass Deception."[17] The term "culture industry" is intended to refer to the commercial marketing of culture, the branch of industry that deals specifically with the production of culture that is in contrast to "authentic culture."[citation needed]

Horkheimer and Adorno contend that industrially produced culture robs people of their imagination and takes over their thinking for them. The culture industry delivers the "goods" so that the people then only have left the task of consuming them.[18] Through mass production, everything becomes homogenized and whatever diversity remains is constituted of small trivialities. Everything becomes compressed through a process of the imposition of schemas under the premise that what's best is to mirror physical reality as closely as possible. Psychological drives become stoked to the point where sublimation is no longer possible.

Movies serve as an example. "All films have become similar in their basic form. They are shaped to reflect facts of reality as closely as possible. Even fantasy films, which claim to not reflect such reality, don't really live up to what they claim to be. No matter how unusual they strive to be, the endings are usually easy to predict because of the existence of prior films which followed the same schemas. Also, for example, erotic depictions become so strong and so pronounced that a transformation to other forms is no longer possible."[2]

The aims of the culture industry are—as in every industry—economic in nature.[19]

Authentic culture, however, is not goal-oriented, but is an end in itself.[citation needed] Authentic culture fosters the capacity of human imagination by presenting suggestions and possibilities, but in a different way than the culture industry does since it leaves room for independent thought. Authentic culture does not become channeled into regurgitating reality but goes levels beyond such. Authentic culture is unique and cannot be forced into any pre-formed schemas.

As for discovering the causes of the development of the culture industry, Horkheimer and Adorno contend that it arises from companies' pursuit of the maximization of profit, in the economic sense.[18] However, this cannot be said to be culture, or what culture is supposed to be. It can only be described as being a form of commerce, just like any other kind of commerce.

The culture industry argument is often assumed to be fundamentally pessimistic in nature because its purveyors seem to condemn "mass media" and their consumers. However, for Adorno, the term "culture industry" does not refer to "mass culture", or the culture of the masses of people in terms of something being produced by the masses and conveying the representations of the masses. On the contrary, such involvement of the masses is only apparent, or a type of seeming democratic participation. Adorno contends that what is actually occurring is a type of "defrauding of the masses". Horkheimer and Adorno deliberately chose the term "culture industry" instead of "mass culture" or "mass media".[20] "The culture industry perpetually cheats its consumers of what it perpetually promises."[21] The culture industry even encroaches upon the small distractions of leisure activity: "Amusement has become an extension of labor under late capitalism."[21] Horkheimer and Adorno, above all, in their critical analyses, delve into what they call "the fraying of art" and the "de-artification of art", and discuss how the arts are defused by the culture industry. Works of art have become commodified: Beethoven, Mozart and Wagner are only used in fragmentary forms when included in advertisement. According to Critical Theory, "selling out" is not the decisive factor involved, but rather it's the manner in which art is commodified and how art and culture are changed that is the crucial issue.[20]

"Culture today is infecting everything with sameness."[22] For Adorno and Horkheimer, subversion has become no longer possible.

Observations edit

Wiggershaus states: "The other side of Adorno's apparently paradoxical definition was ignored: that rational objectivity was still possible for the modern work of art, in any significant sense, only as a product of subjectivity".[23] This would deny Adorno contemporary political significance, arguing that politics in a prosperous society is more concerned with action than with thought. He also notes that the young generation of critical theorists largely ignore Adorno's work which, in part, stems from Adorno's inability to draw practical conclusions from his theories.[page needed]

Adorno is also accused [by whom?] of a lack of consistency in his claims to be implementing Marxism. Whereas he accepted the classical Marxist analysis of society, showing how one class exercises domination over another, he deviated from Marx in his failure to use dialectics as a method to propose ways to change. Marx's theory depended on the willingness of the working class to overthrow the ruling class, but Adorno and Horkheimer postulated that the culture industry has undermined the revolutionary movement. Adorno's idea that the mass of the people are only objects of the culture industry is linked to his feeling that the time when the working class could be the tool of overthrowing capitalism is over. [citation needed]

Adorno's work is still of interest. Writing in The New Yorker in 2014, music critic Alex Ross argued that Adorno's work has a renewed importance in the digital age: "The pop hegemony is all but complete, its superstars dominating the media and wielding the economic might of tycoons...Culture appears more monolithic than ever, with a few gigantic corporations—Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon—presiding over unprecedented monopolies."[24]

Scholar Jack Zipes, influenced by Adorno, critiqued the mass commercialization and corporate hegemony behind the Harry Potter franchise. He argued that the commodities of the culture industry are "popular" because they are homogenous and obey standard conventions; the media then influences the tastes of children. In his analysis of Harry Potter's global brand, Zipes wrote, "It must conform to the standards of exception set by the mass media and promoted by the culture industry in general. To be a phenomenon means that a person or commodity must conform to the hegemonic groups that determine what makes up a phenomenon".[25]

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b Adorno, Theodor. "Frankfurt School: The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception". www.marxists.org. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Horkheimer & Adorno, p.107
  3. ^ Marcuse, Herbert (1966). Eros and civilization: a philosophical inquiry into Freud (4. pr. ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: Beacon Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0807015544.
  4. ^ a b Durham (2003) p.66
  5. ^ Durham (2003) p.68
  6. ^ Durham (2003) p.70
  7. ^ Durham (2003) p.71
  8. ^ Scannell (2007) p.45
  9. ^ Scannell (2007) p.47
  10. ^ Scannell, Paddy (2007). Media and communication. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE Publications. p. 37. ISBN 9781412902687.
  11. ^ Hansen (1992) p.46
  12. ^ Scannell (2007) pp.37–44.
  13. ^ "instrumental reason". Oxford Reference. 1998. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
  14. ^ CCC, Merlin (11 January 2019). "Merlin | Theodor W. Adorno: The Culture Industry (Part 2)". Merlin CCC. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  15. ^ Adorno; Horkheimer (1947). "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception" (PDF). p. 21. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  16. ^ CCC, Merlin (30 December 2018). "Merlin | Theodor W. Adorno: An Introduction (Part 1)". Merlin CCC. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  17. ^ Adorno, Theordor; Horkheimer, Max (2002). "Enlightenment as Mass Decption". Dialectic of Enlightenment: Philosophical Fragments. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 0-8047-3633-2.
  18. ^ a b Horkheimer, Max; Adorno, Theodor (1947). "THE CULTURE INDUSTRY: ENLIGHTENMENT AS MASS DECEPTION" (PDF). pp. 2–4, 22. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
  19. ^ Adorno, Theordor; Horkheimer, Max (2002). "Enlightenment as Mass Decption". Dialectic of Enlightenment: Philosophical Fragments. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. p. 106. ISBN 0-8047-3633-2.
  20. ^ a b Behrens, Roger (2002). Kritische Theorie. Hamburg, Germany: Europäische Verlagsanstalt. pp. 66–68. ISBN 978-3434461142.
  21. ^ a b Horkheimer & Adorno, page 145
  22. ^ Horkheimer & Adorno, page 129
  23. ^ Rolf, Wiggershaus; translated by: Michael, Robertson (1995). The Frankfurt School : its history, theories, and political significance (1st MIT Press pbk. ed.). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. p. 513. ISBN 978-0262731133.
  24. ^ Ross, Alex (8 September 2014) "The Naysayers: Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, and the critique of pop culture The New Yorker
  25. ^ Zipes, J. (2002). Page 175 Sticks and Stones: The Troublesome Success of Children's Literature from Slovenly Peter to Harry Potter.

Bibliography

  • Durham Peters, John (2003). The Subtlety of Horkheimer and Adorno. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-2934-6.
  • Hansen, M (1992). "Mass Culture as Hieroglyphic Writing: Adorno, Derrida, Kraceuer". New German Critique. 56 (56).
  • Horkheimer, Max and Adorno, Theodor W. (2002). Noerr, Gunzelin Schmid (ed.). (PDF). Translated by Edmund Jephcott. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0804736336. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 June 2017. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
  • Scannell, Paddy (2007). Media and Communication. London: SAGE. ISBN 978-1-4129-0269-4.

Further reading

  • Adorno, T. W. Negative Dialectics. New York: The Seabury Press. (1973)
  • Adorno, T.W. A Sample of Adorno's ideas on the culture industry and popular music ()
  • Adorno, T., & Horkheimer, M. Dialectic of Enlightenment. Stanford University Press (2002)
  • Cook, D. The Culture Industry Revisited. Rowman & Littlefield. (1996)
  • Hesmondhalgh, D. The Cultural Industries. Sage. (2002)
  • Scott, Allen J. The Cultural Economy of Cities. Sage. (2001)
  • Steinert, H. Culture Industry. Cambridge: Polity (2003)
  • Wiggershaus, R. The Frankfurt School: its History, Theories, and Political Significance. MIT Press. (1994)
  • Witkin, R.W. Adorno on Popular Culture. Routledge. (2003)

External links edit

  • Adorno. "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception" (). pp. 94–136. (Alternate copy at Marxists.org.)
  • /

culture, industry, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, septembe. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Culture industry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The term culture industry German Kulturindustrie was coined by the critical theorists Theodor Adorno 1903 1969 and Max Horkheimer 1895 1973 and was presented as critical vocabulary in the chapter The Culture Industry Enlightenment as Mass Deception 1 of the book Dialectic of Enlightenment 1947 wherein they proposed that popular culture is akin to a factory producing standardized cultural goods films radio programmes magazines etc that are used to manipulate mass society into passivity 2 Consumption of the easy pleasures of popular culture made available by the mass communications media renders people docile and content no matter how difficult their economic circumstances 2 The inherent danger of the culture industry is the cultivation of false psychological needs that can only be met and satisfied by the products of capitalism thus Adorno and Horkheimer perceived mass produced culture as especially dangerous compared to the more technically and intellectually difficult high arts In contrast true psychological needs are freedom creativity and genuine happiness which refer to an earlier demarcation of human needs established by Herbert Marcuse 3 Contents 1 The Frankfurt School 2 The theory 3 Influences 4 Elements 5 Mass culture 6 Observations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksThe Frankfurt School editMembers of The Frankfurt School were much influenced by the dialectical materialism and historical materialism of Karl Marx as well as the revisitation of the dialectical idealism of Hegel both events are studied not in isolation but as part of the process of change As a group later joined by Jurgen Habermas they were responsible for the formulation of critical theory In works such as Dialectic of Enlightenment and Negative Dialectics Adorno and Horkheimer theorized that the phenomenon of mass culture has a political implication namely that all the many forms of popular culture are parts of a single culture industry whose purpose is to ensure the continued obedience of the masses to market interests The theory editThe essay is concerned with the production of cultural content in capitalist societies It critiques the extortionate nature of cultural economies as well as the apparently inferior products of the system 4 Horkheimer and Adorno argue that mass produced entertainment aims by its very nature to appeal to vast audiences and therefore both the intellectual stimulation of high art and the basic release of low art 5 The essay does not suggest that all products of this system are inherently inferior simply that they have replaced other forms of entertainment without properly fulfilling the important roles played by the now defunct sources of culture 6 Horkheimer and Adorno make consistent comparisons between Fascist Germany and the American film industry They highlight the presence of mass produced culture created and disseminated by exclusive institutions and consumed by a passive homogenised audience in both systems 7 This illustrates the logic of domination in post enlightenment modern society by monopoly capitalism or the nation state 8 Horkheimer and Adorno draw attention to the problems associated with a system that integrates its consumers from above arguing that in attempting to realise enlightenment values of reason and order the holistic power of the individual is undermined 9 Influences editAdorno and Horkheimer s work was influenced by both the broader socio political environment in which it was written and by other major theorists Written in California in the early 1940s in an era which characterized them as two ethnically Jewish German emigres The Culture Industry is influenced by European politics and the war by which the continent was consumed 10 Simultaneously the American film industry was characterised by an unprecedented level of studio monopolisation 4 it was Hollywood at its most classical American mass culture at its most Fordist 11 Horkheimer and Adorno were influenced heavily by major developers of social political and economic theory 12 most notably Karl Marx s theories of alienation and commodity fetishism Max Weber s rationality which shaped the concept of instrumental reason 13 and Georg Lukacs concept of the reification of consciousness Elements editThis article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section possibly contains original research Relevant discussion may be found on Talk Culture industry Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Anything made by a person is a materialization of their labour and an expression of their intentions There will also be a use value the benefit to the consumer will be derived from its utility 14 15 Yet the modern soap operas with their interchangeable plots and formulaic narrative conventions reflect standardized production techniques and the falling value of a mass produced cultural product 1 Only rarely is a film released that makes a more positive impression on the general discourse and achieves a higher exchange value e g Patton 1970 starring George C Scott as the eponymous American general was released at a time of considerable anti war sentiment The opening shot is of Patton in front of an American flag making an impassioned speech This was a form of dialectic in which the audience could identify with the patriotism either sincerely the thesis or ironically the antithesis and so set the tone of the interpretation for the remainder of the film However the film is manipulating specific historical events not only as entertainment but also as a form of propaganda by demonstrating a link between success in strategic resource management situations and specified leadership qualities Given that the subtext was instrumental and not value free ethical and philosophical considerations arise citation needed Normally only high art criticizes the world outside its boundaries but access to this form of communication is limited to the elite classes where the risks of introducing social instability are slight A film like Patton is popular art which intends controversy in a world of social order and unity which according to Adorno is regressing into a cultural blandness To Hegel order is good a priori i e it does not have to answer to those living under it citation needed Marx s theory of Historical Materialism was teleological i e society follows through a dialectic of unfolding stages from ancient modes of production to feudalism to capitalism to a future communism But Adorno felt that the culture industry would never permit a sufficient core of challenging material to emerge on to the market that might disturb the status quo 16 Mass culture editA center point of the Dialectic of Enlightenment is the topic of the Enlightenment as Mass Deception 17 The term culture industry is intended to refer to the commercial marketing of culture the branch of industry that deals specifically with the production of culture that is in contrast to authentic culture citation needed Horkheimer and Adorno contend that industrially produced culture robs people of their imagination and takes over their thinking for them The culture industry delivers the goods so that the people then only have left the task of consuming them 18 Through mass production everything becomes homogenized and whatever diversity remains is constituted of small trivialities Everything becomes compressed through a process of the imposition of schemas under the premise that what s best is to mirror physical reality as closely as possible Psychological drives become stoked to the point where sublimation is no longer possible Movies serve as an example All films have become similar in their basic form They are shaped to reflect facts of reality as closely as possible Even fantasy films which claim to not reflect such reality don t really live up to what they claim to be No matter how unusual they strive to be the endings are usually easy to predict because of the existence of prior films which followed the same schemas Also for example erotic depictions become so strong and so pronounced that a transformation to other forms is no longer possible 2 The aims of the culture industry are as in every industry economic in nature 19 Authentic culture however is not goal oriented but is an end in itself citation needed Authentic culture fosters the capacity of human imagination by presenting suggestions and possibilities but in a different way than the culture industry does since it leaves room for independent thought Authentic culture does not become channeled into regurgitating reality but goes levels beyond such Authentic culture is unique and cannot be forced into any pre formed schemas As for discovering the causes of the development of the culture industry Horkheimer and Adorno contend that it arises from companies pursuit of the maximization of profit in the economic sense 18 However this cannot be said to be culture or what culture is supposed to be It can only be described as being a form of commerce just like any other kind of commerce The culture industry argument is often assumed to be fundamentally pessimistic in nature because its purveyors seem to condemn mass media and their consumers However for Adorno the term culture industry does not refer to mass culture or the culture of the masses of people in terms of something being produced by the masses and conveying the representations of the masses On the contrary such involvement of the masses is only apparent or a type of seeming democratic participation Adorno contends that what is actually occurring is a type of defrauding of the masses Horkheimer and Adorno deliberately chose the term culture industry instead of mass culture or mass media 20 The culture industry perpetually cheats its consumers of what it perpetually promises 21 The culture industry even encroaches upon the small distractions of leisure activity Amusement has become an extension of labor under late capitalism 21 Horkheimer and Adorno above all in their critical analyses delve into what they call the fraying of art and the de artification of art and discuss how the arts are defused by the culture industry Works of art have become commodified Beethoven Mozart and Wagner are only used in fragmentary forms when included in advertisement According to Critical Theory selling out is not the decisive factor involved but rather it s the manner in which art is commodified and how art and culture are changed that is the crucial issue 20 Culture today is infecting everything with sameness 22 For Adorno and Horkheimer subversion has become no longer possible Observations editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Wiggershaus states The other side of Adorno s apparently paradoxical definition was ignored that rational objectivity was still possible for the modern work of art in any significant sense only as a product of subjectivity 23 This would deny Adorno contemporary political significance arguing that politics in a prosperous society is more concerned with action than with thought He also notes that the young generation of critical theorists largely ignore Adorno s work which in part stems from Adorno s inability to draw practical conclusions from his theories page needed Adorno is also accused by whom of a lack of consistency in his claims to be implementing Marxism Whereas he accepted the classical Marxist analysis of society showing how one class exercises domination over another he deviated from Marx in his failure to use dialectics as a method to propose ways to change Marx s theory depended on the willingness of the working class to overthrow the ruling class but Adorno and Horkheimer postulated that the culture industry has undermined the revolutionary movement Adorno s idea that the mass of the people are only objects of the culture industry is linked to his feeling that the time when the working class could be the tool of overthrowing capitalism is over citation needed Adorno s work is still of interest Writing in The New Yorker in 2014 music critic Alex Ross argued that Adorno s work has a renewed importance in the digital age The pop hegemony is all but complete its superstars dominating the media and wielding the economic might of tycoons Culture appears more monolithic than ever with a few gigantic corporations Google Apple Facebook Amazon presiding over unprecedented monopolies 24 Scholar Jack Zipes influenced by Adorno critiqued the mass commercialization and corporate hegemony behind the Harry Potter franchise He argued that the commodities of the culture industry are popular because they are homogenous and obey standard conventions the media then influences the tastes of children In his analysis of Harry Potter s global brand Zipes wrote It must conform to the standards of exception set by the mass media and promoted by the culture industry in general To be a phenomenon means that a person or commodity must conform to the hegemonic groups that determine what makes up a phenomenon 25 See also editLeisure industry Sector of the economy dealing with recreation and tourism Cultural critic Professional who reasonably judges the norms and behaviors of a society Cultural capital Concept of social status and social mobility Cultural expressions for copyright implicationsReferences editNotes a b Adorno Theodor Frankfurt School The Culture Industry Enlightenment as Mass Deception www marxists org Retrieved 19 July 2022 a b c Horkheimer amp Adorno p 107 Marcuse Herbert 1966 Eros and civilization a philosophical inquiry into Freud 4 pr ed Boston Massachusetts Beacon Press p 136 ISBN 978 0807015544 a b Durham 2003 p 66 Durham 2003 p 68 Durham 2003 p 70 Durham 2003 p 71 Scannell 2007 p 45 Scannell 2007 p 47 Scannell Paddy 2007 Media and communication Thousand Oaks California SAGE Publications p 37 ISBN 9781412902687 Hansen 1992 p 46 Scannell 2007 pp 37 44 instrumental reason Oxford Reference 1998 Retrieved 24 August 2023 CCC Merlin 11 January 2019 Merlin Theodor W Adorno The Culture Industry Part 2 Merlin CCC Retrieved 25 August 2023 Adorno Horkheimer 1947 The Culture Industry Enlightenment as Mass Deception PDF p 21 Retrieved 25 August 2023 CCC Merlin 30 December 2018 Merlin Theodor W Adorno An Introduction Part 1 Merlin CCC Retrieved 25 August 2023 Adorno Theordor Horkheimer Max 2002 Enlightenment as Mass Decption Dialectic of Enlightenment Philosophical Fragments Stanford California Stanford University Press p 94 ISBN 0 8047 3633 2 a b Horkheimer Max Adorno Theodor 1947 THE CULTURE INDUSTRY ENLIGHTENMENT AS MASS DECEPTION PDF pp 2 4 22 Retrieved 24 August 2023 Adorno Theordor Horkheimer Max 2002 Enlightenment as Mass Decption Dialectic of Enlightenment Philosophical Fragments Stanford California Stanford University Press p 106 ISBN 0 8047 3633 2 a b Behrens Roger 2002 Kritische Theorie Hamburg Germany Europaische Verlagsanstalt pp 66 68 ISBN 978 3434461142 a b Horkheimer amp Adorno page 145 Horkheimer amp Adorno page 129 Rolf Wiggershaus translated by Michael Robertson 1995 The Frankfurt School its history theories and political significance 1st MIT Press pbk ed Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press p 513 ISBN 978 0262731133 Ross Alex 8 September 2014 The Naysayers Walter Benjamin Theodor Adorno and the critique of pop culture The New Yorker Zipes J 2002 Page 175 Sticks and Stones The Troublesome Success of Children s Literature from Slovenly Peter to Harry Potter Bibliography Durham Peters John 2003 The Subtlety of Horkheimer and Adorno Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 2934 6 Hansen M 1992 Mass Culture as Hieroglyphic Writing Adorno Derrida Kraceuer New German Critique 56 56 Horkheimer Max and Adorno Theodor W 2002 Noerr Gunzelin Schmid ed Dialectic of enlightenment philosophical fragments PDF Translated by Edmund Jephcott Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0804736336 Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2017 Retrieved 4 August 2016 Scannell Paddy 2007 Media and Communication London SAGE ISBN 978 1 4129 0269 4 Further reading Adorno T W Negative Dialectics New York The Seabury Press 1973 Adorno T W A Sample of Adorno s ideas on the culture industry and popular music Archive Adorno T amp Horkheimer M Dialectic of Enlightenment Stanford University Press 2002 Cook D The Culture Industry Revisited Rowman amp Littlefield 1996 Hesmondhalgh D The Cultural Industries Sage 2002 Scott Allen J The Cultural Economy of Cities Sage 2001 Steinert H Culture Industry Cambridge Polity 2003 Wiggershaus R The Frankfurt School its History Theories and Political Significance MIT Press 1994 Witkin R W Adorno on Popular Culture Routledge 2003 External links editAdorno The Culture Industry Enlightenment as Mass Deception Archive pp 94 136 Alternate copy at Marxists org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Culture industry amp oldid 1178886619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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