Critical Ecologies
The Frankfurt School and Contemporary Environmental Crises
Herausgeber: Biro, Andrew
Critical Ecologies
The Frankfurt School and Contemporary Environmental Crises
Herausgeber: Biro, Andrew
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Critical Ecologies aims to redeem the theories of major Frankfurt thinkers--Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse, among others--by applying them to contemporary environmental crises.
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Critical Ecologies aims to redeem the theories of major Frankfurt thinkers--Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse, among others--by applying them to contemporary environmental crises.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. April 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 703g
- ISBN-13: 9780802095657
- ISBN-10: 0802095658
- Artikelnr.: 32738540
- Verlag: University of Toronto Press
- Seitenzahl: 352
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. April 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 703g
- ISBN-13: 9780802095657
- ISBN-10: 0802095658
- Artikelnr.: 32738540
Edited by Andrew Biro
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Paradoxes of Contemporary Environmental Crises and the
Redemption of the Hopes of the Past by Andrew Biro (Acadia University)
PART ONE: Science and the Mastery of Nature
1. Modern Science, Enlightenment, and the Domination of Nature: No Exit?
by William Leiss (Professor Emeritus, Queen's University)
2. Societal Relations with Nature: A Dialectical Approach to
Environmental Politics by Christopher Görg (University of Kassel)
3. The Politics of Science: Has Marcuse’s New Science Finally Come of
Age? by Katharine N Farrell (Autonomous University Barcelona)
PART TWO: Critical Theory, Life, and Nature
1. Sacred Identity and the Sacrificial Spirit: Mimesis and Radical
Ecology by Bruce Martin (New Mexico State University
2. From ‘Unity of Life’ to the Critique of Domination: Jonas, Freud, and
Marcuse by Colin Campbell (York University)
PART THREE: Alienation and the Aesthetic
1. Adorno’s Aesthetic Rationality: On the Dialect of Natural and
Artistic Beauty by Donald D Burke (York University)
2. On Nature and Alienation by Steven Vogel (Denison University)
3. Fear and the Unknown: Nature, Culture, and the Limits of Reason by
Shane Gunster (Simon Fraser University)
4. Ecological Crisis and the Culture Industry Thesis by Andrew Biro
PART FOUR: Critical Theory’s Moment
1. Natural History, Sovereign Power, and Global Warming by Jonathan
Short (York University)
2. Adorno’s Historical and Temporal Consciousness: Towards a Critical
Theoretical Environmental Imagination by Michael Lipscomb (Winthrop
University)
3. Toward a Critique of Posthuman Reason: Revisiting ‘Nature’ and
‘Humanity’ in Horkheimer’s ‘The Concept of Man’ by Timothy W Luke
(Virginia Polytechnic Institute)
Afterword: The Liberation of Nature? by Andrew Feenberg (Simon Fraser
University)
Introduction: The Paradoxes of Contemporary Environmental Crises and the
Redemption of the Hopes of the Past by Andrew Biro (Acadia University)
PART ONE: Science and the Mastery of Nature
1. Modern Science, Enlightenment, and the Domination of Nature: No Exit?
by William Leiss (Professor Emeritus, Queen's University)
2. Societal Relations with Nature: A Dialectical Approach to
Environmental Politics by Christopher Görg (University of Kassel)
3. The Politics of Science: Has Marcuse’s New Science Finally Come of
Age? by Katharine N Farrell (Autonomous University Barcelona)
PART TWO: Critical Theory, Life, and Nature
1. Sacred Identity and the Sacrificial Spirit: Mimesis and Radical
Ecology by Bruce Martin (New Mexico State University
2. From ‘Unity of Life’ to the Critique of Domination: Jonas, Freud, and
Marcuse by Colin Campbell (York University)
PART THREE: Alienation and the Aesthetic
1. Adorno’s Aesthetic Rationality: On the Dialect of Natural and
Artistic Beauty by Donald D Burke (York University)
2. On Nature and Alienation by Steven Vogel (Denison University)
3. Fear and the Unknown: Nature, Culture, and the Limits of Reason by
Shane Gunster (Simon Fraser University)
4. Ecological Crisis and the Culture Industry Thesis by Andrew Biro
PART FOUR: Critical Theory’s Moment
1. Natural History, Sovereign Power, and Global Warming by Jonathan
Short (York University)
2. Adorno’s Historical and Temporal Consciousness: Towards a Critical
Theoretical Environmental Imagination by Michael Lipscomb (Winthrop
University)
3. Toward a Critique of Posthuman Reason: Revisiting ‘Nature’ and
‘Humanity’ in Horkheimer’s ‘The Concept of Man’ by Timothy W Luke
(Virginia Polytechnic Institute)
Afterword: The Liberation of Nature? by Andrew Feenberg (Simon Fraser
University)
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Paradoxes of Contemporary Environmental Crises and the
Redemption of the Hopes of the Past by Andrew Biro (Acadia University)
PART ONE: Science and the Mastery of Nature
1. Modern Science, Enlightenment, and the Domination of Nature: No Exit?
by William Leiss (Professor Emeritus, Queen's University)
2. Societal Relations with Nature: A Dialectical Approach to
Environmental Politics by Christopher Görg (University of Kassel)
3. The Politics of Science: Has Marcuse’s New Science Finally Come of
Age? by Katharine N Farrell (Autonomous University Barcelona)
PART TWO: Critical Theory, Life, and Nature
1. Sacred Identity and the Sacrificial Spirit: Mimesis and Radical
Ecology by Bruce Martin (New Mexico State University
2. From ‘Unity of Life’ to the Critique of Domination: Jonas, Freud, and
Marcuse by Colin Campbell (York University)
PART THREE: Alienation and the Aesthetic
1. Adorno’s Aesthetic Rationality: On the Dialect of Natural and
Artistic Beauty by Donald D Burke (York University)
2. On Nature and Alienation by Steven Vogel (Denison University)
3. Fear and the Unknown: Nature, Culture, and the Limits of Reason by
Shane Gunster (Simon Fraser University)
4. Ecological Crisis and the Culture Industry Thesis by Andrew Biro
PART FOUR: Critical Theory’s Moment
1. Natural History, Sovereign Power, and Global Warming by Jonathan
Short (York University)
2. Adorno’s Historical and Temporal Consciousness: Towards a Critical
Theoretical Environmental Imagination by Michael Lipscomb (Winthrop
University)
3. Toward a Critique of Posthuman Reason: Revisiting ‘Nature’ and
‘Humanity’ in Horkheimer’s ‘The Concept of Man’ by Timothy W Luke
(Virginia Polytechnic Institute)
Afterword: The Liberation of Nature? by Andrew Feenberg (Simon Fraser
University)
Introduction: The Paradoxes of Contemporary Environmental Crises and the
Redemption of the Hopes of the Past by Andrew Biro (Acadia University)
PART ONE: Science and the Mastery of Nature
1. Modern Science, Enlightenment, and the Domination of Nature: No Exit?
by William Leiss (Professor Emeritus, Queen's University)
2. Societal Relations with Nature: A Dialectical Approach to
Environmental Politics by Christopher Görg (University of Kassel)
3. The Politics of Science: Has Marcuse’s New Science Finally Come of
Age? by Katharine N Farrell (Autonomous University Barcelona)
PART TWO: Critical Theory, Life, and Nature
1. Sacred Identity and the Sacrificial Spirit: Mimesis and Radical
Ecology by Bruce Martin (New Mexico State University
2. From ‘Unity of Life’ to the Critique of Domination: Jonas, Freud, and
Marcuse by Colin Campbell (York University)
PART THREE: Alienation and the Aesthetic
1. Adorno’s Aesthetic Rationality: On the Dialect of Natural and
Artistic Beauty by Donald D Burke (York University)
2. On Nature and Alienation by Steven Vogel (Denison University)
3. Fear and the Unknown: Nature, Culture, and the Limits of Reason by
Shane Gunster (Simon Fraser University)
4. Ecological Crisis and the Culture Industry Thesis by Andrew Biro
PART FOUR: Critical Theory’s Moment
1. Natural History, Sovereign Power, and Global Warming by Jonathan
Short (York University)
2. Adorno’s Historical and Temporal Consciousness: Towards a Critical
Theoretical Environmental Imagination by Michael Lipscomb (Winthrop
University)
3. Toward a Critique of Posthuman Reason: Revisiting ‘Nature’ and
‘Humanity’ in Horkheimer’s ‘The Concept of Man’ by Timothy W Luke
(Virginia Polytechnic Institute)
Afterword: The Liberation of Nature? by Andrew Feenberg (Simon Fraser
University)