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Dialectic of Enlightenment

Dialectic of Enlightenment (German: Dialektik der Aufklärung) is a work of philosophy and social criticism written by Frankfurt School philosophers Max Horkheimer and Theodor W. Adorno. The text, published in 1947, is a revised version of what the authors originally had circulated among friends and colleagues in 1944 under the title of Philosophical Fragments (German: Philosophische Fragmente).[1]

Dialectic of Enlightenment
AuthorsMax Horkheimer
Theodor W. Adorno
Original titleDialektik der Aufklärung
TranslatorJohn Cumming (1972)
CountryGermany
LanguageGerman
SubjectsPhilosophy, social criticism
Publication date
1947
Published in English
1972 (New York: Herder and Herder)
Media typePrint (pbk)
Pages304
ISBN0-8047-3633-2
OCLC48851495
193 21
LC ClassB3279.H8473 P513 2002

One of the core texts of critical theory, Dialectic of Enlightenment explores the socio-psychological status quo that had been responsible for what the Frankfurt School considered the failure of the Age of Enlightenment. Together with Adorno's The Authoritarian Personality (1950) and fellow Frankfurt School member Herbert Marcuse's One-Dimensional Man (1964), it has had a major effect on 20th-century philosophy, sociology, culture, and politics, especially inspiring the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s.[2]

Historical context

One of the distinguishing characteristics of the new critical theory, as Adorno and Horkheimer set out to elaborate it in Dialectic of Enlightenment, is a certain ambivalence concerning the ultimate source or foundation of social domination.

Such would give rise to the "pessimism" of the new critical theory over the possibility of human emancipation and freedom.[3]: 242  Furthermore, this ambivalence was rooted in the historical circumstances in which Dialectic of Enlightenment was originally produced: the authors saw National Socialism, Stalinism, state capitalism, and culture industry as entirely new forms of social domination that could not be adequately explained within the terms of traditional theory.[4]

For Adorno and Horkheimer (relying on the economist Friedrich Pollock's thesis[5] on National Socialism),[6] state intervention in the economy had effectively abolished the tension in capitalism between the "relations of production" and the "material productive forces of society," a tension that, according to traditional theory, constituted the primary contradiction within capitalism. The market (as an "unconscious" mechanism for the distribution of goods) had been replaced by centralized planning.[3]: 38 

[G]one are the objective laws of the market which ruled in the actions of the entrepreneurs and tended toward catastrophe. Instead the conscious decision of the managing directors executes as results (which are more obligatory than the blindest price-mechanisms) the old law of value and hence the destiny of capitalism.

— Dialectic of Enlightenment, p. 38

Because of this, contrary to Marx's famous prediction in his preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, this shift did not lead to "an era of social revolution," but rather to fascism and totalitarianism. As such, traditional theory was left, in Jürgen Habermas' words, without "anything in reserve to which it might appeal; and when the forces of production enter into a baneful symbiosis with the relations of production that they were supposed to blow wide open, there is no longer any dynamism upon which critique could base its hope."[7]: 118  For Adorno and Horkheimer, this posed the problem of how to account for the apparent persistence of domination in the absence of the very contradiction that, according to traditional critical theory, was the source of domination itself.[2]

Topics and themes

The problems posed by the rise of fascism with the demise of the liberal state and the market (together with the failure of a social revolution to materialize in its wake) constitute the theoretical and historical perspective that frames the overall argument of the book—the two theses that "Myth is already enlightenment, and enlightenment reverts to mythology."[3]: xviii 

The history of human societies, as well as that of the formation of individual ego or self, is re-evaluated from the standpoint of what Horkheimer and Adorno perceived at the time as the ultimate outcome of this history: the collapse or "regression" of reason, with the rise of National Socialism, into something (referred to as merely "enlightenment" for the majority of the text) resembling the very forms of superstition and myth out of which reason had supposedly emerged as a result of historical progress or development.

Horkheimer and Adorno believe that in the process of "enlightenment," modern philosophy had become over-rationalized and an instrument of technocracy. They characterize the peak of this process as positivism, referring to both the logical positivism of the Vienna Circle and broader trends that they saw in continuity with this movement.[8] Horkheimer and Adorno's critique of positivism has been criticized as too broad; they are particularly critiqued for interpreting Ludwig Wittgenstein as a positivist—at the time only his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus had been published, not his later works—and for failing to examine critiques of positivism from within analytic philosophy.[9]

To characterize this history, Horkheimer and Adorno draw on a wide variety of material, including the philosophical anthropology contained in Marx's early writings, centered on the notion of "labor;" Nietzsche's genealogy of morality, and the emergence of conscience through the renunciation of the will to power; Freud's account in Totem and Taboo of the emergence of civilization and law in murder of the primordial father;[10] and ethnological research on magic and rituals in primitive societies;[11] as well as myth criticism, philology, and literary analysis.[12]

The authors coined the term culture industry, arguing that in a capitalist society, mass culture is akin to a factory producing standardized cultural goods—films, radio programmes, magazines, etc.[13] These homogenized cultural products are used to manipulate mass society into docility and passivity.[14] The introduction of the radio, a mass medium, no longer permits its listener any mechanism of reply, as was the case with the telephone. Instead, listeners are not subjects anymore but passive receptacles exposed "in authoritarian fashion to the same programs put out by different stations."[15]

By associating the Enlightenment and Totalitarianism with Marquis de Sade's works—especially Juliette, in excursus II—the text also contributes to the pathologization of sadomasochist desires, as discussed by historian of sexuality Alison Moore.[16]

Editions

The book made its first appearance in 1944 under the title Philosophische Fragmente by Social Studies Association, Inc. (New York). Dialektik der Aufklärung (Dialectic of Enlightenment) was published as a revised version in 1947 by Querido Verlag (Amsterdam). It was reissued in 1969 by S. Fischer Verlag.

There have been two English translations: the first by John Cumming (New York: Herder and Herder, 1972); and a more recent translation, based on the definitive text from Horkheimer's collected works, by Edmund Jephcott (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2002).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Schmidt, James (1998). "'Language, Mythology, and Enlightenment: Historical Notes on Horkheimer and Adorno's Dialectic of Enlightenment.'". Social Research. 65 (4): 807-38 (p.809).
  2. ^ a b Held, D. (1980). Introduction to Critical Theory: Horkheimer to Habermas. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  3. ^ a b c Adorno, T. W., and Max Horkheimer. [1947] 2002. Dialectic of Enlightenment, translated by E. Jephcott. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  4. ^ Habermas, Jürgen. [1985] 1987. The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity: Twelve Lectures, translated by F. Lawrence. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. p. 116: "Critical Theory was initially developed in Horkheimer's circle to think through political disappointments at the absence of revolution in the West, the development of Stalinism in Soviet Russia, and the victory of fascism in Germany. It was supposed to explain mistaken Marxist prognoses, but without breaking Marxist intentions." (See also: Dubiel, Helmut. 1985. Theory and Politics: Studies in the Development of Critical Theory, translated by B. Gregg. Cambridge, MA.)
  5. ^ Pollock, Friedrich. 1941. "Is National Socialism a New Order?" Studies in Philosophy and Social Science 9 (2):440–45. p. 453.
  6. ^ van Reijen, Willem, and Jan Bransen. "The Disappearance of Class History in the Dialectic of Enlightenment." In Dialectic of Enlightenment. p. 248.
  7. ^ Habermas, Jürgen. 1982. "The Entwinement of Myth and Enlightenment: Re-Reading 'Dialectic of Enlightenment'." New German Critique 26(4):13-30. doi:10.2307/488023. JSTOR 488023.
  8. ^ Josephson-Storm, Jason (2017). The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity, and the Birth of the Human Sciences. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 244–5. ISBN 978-0-226-40336-6.
  9. ^ Josephson-Storm (2017, pp. 242, 243–4)
  10. ^ Dialectic of Enlightenment, 7, 159, 162.
  11. ^ Dialectic of Enlightenment, 10, 256.
  12. ^ Moore, Alison (September 2010). "Sadean Nature and Reasoned Morality in Adorno/Horkheimer's 'Dialectic of Enlightenment'". Psychology and Sexuality. 1 (3): 249–260. doi:10.1080/19419899.2010.494901. S2CID 143713118.
  13. ^ pp. 94–5 quotation:

    Culture today is infecting everything with sameness. Film, radio, and magazines form a system. Each branch of culture is unanimous within itself and all are unanimous together. Even the aesthetic manifestations of political opposites proclaim the same inflexible rhythm...All mass culture under monopoly is identical... Films and radio no longer need to present themselves as art. The truth that they are nothing but business is used as an ideology to legitimize the trash they intentionally produce.

  14. ^ pp. 94–5 quotation:

    ...The standardized forms, it is claimed, were originally derived from the needs of the consumers: that is why they are accepted with so little resistance. In reality, a cycle of manipulation and retroactive need is unifying the system ever more tightly.

  15. ^ pp. 95–6 quotation:

    The step from telephone to radio has clearly distinguished the roles. The former liberally permitted the participant to play the role of subject. The latter democratically makes everyone equally into listeners, in order to expose them in authoritarian fashion to the same programs put out by different stations. No mechanism of reply has been developed...

  16. ^ Moore, Alison M. 2015. Sexual Myths of Modernity: Sadism, Masochism and Historical Teleology. Lanham: Lexington Books. ISBN 978-0-7391-3077-3.

External links

  • "The Culture Industry: Enlightenment as Mass Deception." Excerpt of Chapter 1 of The Dialectic of Enlightenment, transcribed by A. Blunden [1998] 2005.
  • "Dialectic of Enlightenment," in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

dialectic, enlightenment, german, dialektik, aufklärung, work, philosophy, social, criticism, written, frankfurt, school, philosophers, horkheimer, theodor, adorno, text, published, 1947, revised, version, what, authors, originally, circulated, among, friends,. Dialectic of Enlightenment German Dialektik der Aufklarung is a work of philosophy and social criticism written by Frankfurt School philosophers Max Horkheimer and Theodor W Adorno The text published in 1947 is a revised version of what the authors originally had circulated among friends and colleagues in 1944 under the title of Philosophical Fragments German Philosophische Fragmente 1 Dialectic of EnlightenmentAuthorsMax HorkheimerTheodor W AdornoOriginal titleDialektik der AufklarungTranslatorJohn Cumming 1972 CountryGermanyLanguageGermanSubjectsPhilosophy social criticismPublication date1947Published in English1972 New York Herder and Herder Media typePrint pbk Pages304ISBN0 8047 3633 2OCLC48851495Dewey Decimal193 21LC ClassB3279 H8473 P513 2002One of the core texts of critical theory Dialectic of Enlightenment explores the socio psychological status quo that had been responsible for what the Frankfurt School considered the failure of the Age of Enlightenment Together with Adorno s The Authoritarian Personality 1950 and fellow Frankfurt School member Herbert Marcuse s One Dimensional Man 1964 it has had a major effect on 20th century philosophy sociology culture and politics especially inspiring the New Left of the 1960s and 1970s 2 Contents 1 Historical context 2 Topics and themes 3 Editions 4 See also 5 Notes 6 External linksHistorical context EditOne of the distinguishing characteristics of the new critical theory as Adorno and Horkheimer set out to elaborate it in Dialectic of Enlightenment is a certain ambivalence concerning the ultimate source or foundation of social domination Such would give rise to the pessimism of the new critical theory over the possibility of human emancipation and freedom 3 242 Furthermore this ambivalence was rooted in the historical circumstances in which Dialectic of Enlightenment was originally produced the authors saw National Socialism Stalinism state capitalism and culture industry as entirely new forms of social domination that could not be adequately explained within the terms of traditional theory 4 For Adorno and Horkheimer relying on the economist Friedrich Pollock s thesis 5 on National Socialism 6 state intervention in the economy had effectively abolished the tension in capitalism between the relations of production and the material productive forces of society a tension that according to traditional theory constituted the primary contradiction within capitalism The market as an unconscious mechanism for the distribution of goods had been replaced by centralized planning 3 38 G one are the objective laws of the market which ruled in the actions of the entrepreneurs and tended toward catastrophe Instead the conscious decision of the managing directors executes as results which are more obligatory than the blindest price mechanisms the old law of value and hence the destiny of capitalism Dialectic of Enlightenment p 38 Because of this contrary to Marx s famous prediction in his preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy this shift did not lead to an era of social revolution but rather to fascism and totalitarianism As such traditional theory was left in Jurgen Habermas words without anything in reserve to which it might appeal and when the forces of production enter into a baneful symbiosis with the relations of production that they were supposed to blow wide open there is no longer any dynamism upon which critique could base its hope 7 118 For Adorno and Horkheimer this posed the problem of how to account for the apparent persistence of domination in the absence of the very contradiction that according to traditional critical theory was the source of domination itself 2 Topics and themes EditThe problems posed by the rise of fascism with the demise of the liberal state and the market together with the failure of a social revolution to materialize in its wake constitute the theoretical and historical perspective that frames the overall argument of the book the two theses that Myth is already enlightenment and enlightenment reverts to mythology 3 xviii The history of human societies as well as that of the formation of individual ego or self is re evaluated from the standpoint of what Horkheimer and Adorno perceived at the time as the ultimate outcome of this history the collapse or regression of reason with the rise of National Socialism into something referred to as merely enlightenment for the majority of the text resembling the very forms of superstition and myth out of which reason had supposedly emerged as a result of historical progress or development Horkheimer and Adorno believe that in the process of enlightenment modern philosophy had become over rationalized and an instrument of technocracy They characterize the peak of this process as positivism referring to both the logical positivism of the Vienna Circle and broader trends that they saw in continuity with this movement 8 Horkheimer and Adorno s critique of positivism has been criticized as too broad they are particularly critiqued for interpreting Ludwig Wittgenstein as a positivist at the time only his Tractatus Logico Philosophicus had been published not his later works and for failing to examine critiques of positivism from within analytic philosophy 9 To characterize this history Horkheimer and Adorno draw on a wide variety of material including the philosophical anthropology contained in Marx s early writings centered on the notion of labor Nietzsche s genealogy of morality and the emergence of conscience through the renunciation of the will to power Freud s account in Totem and Taboo of the emergence of civilization and law in murder of the primordial father 10 and ethnological research on magic and rituals in primitive societies 11 as well as myth criticism philology and literary analysis 12 The authors coined the term culture industry arguing that in a capitalist society mass culture is akin to a factory producing standardized cultural goods films radio programmes magazines etc 13 These homogenized cultural products are used to manipulate mass society into docility and passivity 14 The introduction of the radio a mass medium no longer permits its listener any mechanism of reply as was the case with the telephone Instead listeners are not subjects anymore but passive receptacles exposed in authoritarian fashion to the same programs put out by different stations 15 By associating the Enlightenment and Totalitarianism with Marquis de Sade s works especially Juliette in excursus II the text also contributes to the pathologization of sadomasochist desires as discussed by historian of sexuality Alison Moore 16 Editions EditThe book made its first appearance in 1944 under the title Philosophische Fragmente by Social Studies Association Inc New York Dialektik der Aufklarung Dialectic of Enlightenment was published as a revised version in 1947 by Querido Verlag Amsterdam It was reissued in 1969 by S Fischer Verlag There have been two English translations the first by John Cumming New York Herder and Herder 1972 and a more recent translation based on the definitive text from Horkheimer s collected works by Edmund Jephcott Stanford Stanford University Press 2002 See also EditCounter Enlightenment Das KapitalNotes Edit Schmidt James 1998 Language Mythology and Enlightenment Historical Notes on Horkheimer and Adorno s Dialectic of Enlightenment Social Research 65 4 807 38 p 809 a b Held D 1980 Introduction to Critical Theory Horkheimer to Habermas Berkeley CA University of California Press a b c Adorno T W and Max Horkheimer 1947 2002 Dialectic of Enlightenment translated by E Jephcott Stanford Stanford University Press Habermas Jurgen 1985 1987 The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Twelve Lectures translated by F Lawrence Cambridge MA MIT Press p 116 Critical Theory was initially developed in Horkheimer s circle to think through political disappointments at the absence of revolution in the West the development of Stalinism in Soviet Russia and the victory of fascism in Germany It was supposed to explain mistaken Marxist prognoses but without breaking Marxist intentions See also Dubiel Helmut 1985 Theory and Politics Studies in the Development of Critical Theory translated by B Gregg Cambridge MA Pollock Friedrich 1941 Is National Socialism a New Order Studies in Philosophy and Social Science 9 2 440 45 p 453 van Reijen Willem and Jan Bransen The Disappearance of Class History in the Dialectic of Enlightenment In Dialectic of Enlightenment p 248 Habermas Jurgen 1982 The Entwinement of Myth and Enlightenment Re Reading Dialectic of Enlightenment New German Critique 26 4 13 30 doi 10 2307 488023 JSTOR 488023 Josephson Storm Jason 2017 The Myth of Disenchantment Magic Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences Chicago University of Chicago Press p 244 5 ISBN 978 0 226 40336 6 Josephson Storm 2017 pp 242 243 4 Dialectic of Enlightenment 7 159 162 Dialectic of Enlightenment 10 256 Moore Alison September 2010 Sadean Nature and Reasoned Morality in Adorno Horkheimer s Dialectic of Enlightenment Psychology and Sexuality 1 3 249 260 doi 10 1080 19419899 2010 494901 S2CID 143713118 pp 94 5 quotation Culture today is infecting everything with sameness Film radio and magazines form a system Each branch of culture is unanimous within itself and all are unanimous together Even the aesthetic manifestations of political opposites proclaim the same inflexible rhythm All mass culture under monopoly is identical Films and radio no longer need to present themselves as art The truth that they are nothing but business is used as an ideology to legitimize the trash they intentionally produce pp 94 5 quotation The standardized forms it is claimed were originally derived from the needs of the consumers that is why they are accepted with so little resistance In reality a cycle of manipulation and retroactive need is unifying the system ever more tightly pp 95 6 quotation The step from telephone to radio has clearly distinguished the roles The former liberally permitted the participant to play the role of subject The latter democratically makes everyone equally into listeners in order to expose them in authoritarian fashion to the same programs put out by different stations No mechanism of reply has been developed Moore Alison M 2015 Sexual Myths of Modernity Sadism Masochism and Historical Teleology Lanham Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 3077 3 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Dialectic of Enlightenment The Culture Industry Enlightenment as Mass Deception Excerpt of Chapter 1 of The Dialectic of Enlightenment transcribed by A Blunden 1998 2005 Dialectic of Enlightenment in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dialectic of Enlightenment amp oldid 1126650544, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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