|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David BerryPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9781409411802ISBN 10: 140941180 Pages: 218 Publication Date: 28 January 2012 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'Berry brings together an eminent group of scholars in communication and cultural studies who demonstrate the Frankfurt's School's importance for a new generation of critical thinkers. Appreciating the complexity of the School's contribution, the authors range widely over cultural studies, political economy, and Marxist thought to produce an insightful and provocative reassessment.' Vincent Mosco, author of The Political Economy of Communication 'Revisiting the Frankfurt School is a comprehensive and engaging corrective to perennially ill-informed misunderstandings and misrepresentations of critical cultural theory. Mixing fascinating historical and conceptual material, it expertly presents the convincing case that in today's dark age of cultural banality, the Frankfurt School's learned insights have never been more valuable.' Paul A. Taylor, University of Leeds, UK ’This collection [...] is an interesting counterpart to another collection of essays, Rethinking the Frankfurt School, edited by Jeffrey T. Nealton and Caren Irr, which is structured on this contrary model... an important and often understated set of perspectives on the Frankfurt school... a set of essays that demonstrate the crucial importance of more neglected Frankfurt School associates to our understanding the history of the Frankfurt Institute, the academic disciplines of media and cultural studies, and the contemporary world.’ Review31 'This rewarding collection of ten new chapters concentrates on lesser-known dimensions and, say, thinkers and scholars less often recognised as members of the Frankfurt School such as Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer, Erich Fromm, plus some followers like Hans Magnus Enzenberger and Dallas Smythe... Revisiting the Frankfurt School will be most useful for academics who teach Frankfurt School, either in philosophy, sociology, media and Cultural Studies, who seek clear examples and contemporary demonstrations taken from the 21st century.' Sociological Research 'Berry brings together an eminent group of scholars in communication and cultural studies who demonstrate the Frankfurt's School's importance for a new generation of critical thinkers. Appreciating the complexity of the School's contribution, the authors range widely over cultural studies, political economy, and Marxist thought to produce an insightful and provocative reassessment.' Vincent Mosco, author of The Political Economy of Communication 'Revisiting the Frankfurt School is a comprehensive and engaging corrective to perennially ill-informed misunderstandings and misrepresentations of critical cultural theory. Mixing fascinating historical and conceptual material, it expertly presents the convincing case that in today's dark age of cultural banality, the Frankfurt School's learned insights have never been more valuable.' Paul A. Taylor, University of Leeds, UK 'This collection [...] is an interesting counterpart to another collection of essays, Rethinking the Frankfurt School, edited by Jeffrey T. Nealton and Caren Irr, which is structured on this contrary model... an important and often understated set of perspectives on the Frankfurt school... a set of essays that demonstrate the crucial importance of more neglected Frankfurt School associates to our understanding the history of the Frankfurt Institute, the academic disciplines of media and cultural studies, and the contemporary world.' Review31 'This rewarding collection of ten new chapters concentrates on lesser-known dimensions and, say, thinkers and scholars less often recognised as members of the Frankfurt School such as Walter Benjamin, Siegfried Kracauer, Erich Fromm, plus some followers like Hans Magnus Enzenberger and Dallas Smythe... Revisiting the Frankfurt School will be most useful for academics who teach Frankfurt School, either in philosophy, sociology, media and Cultural Studies, who seek clear examples and contemporary demonstrations taken from the 21st century.' Sociological Research Online 'The book's greatest contribution is the extent to which it reveals the broad spectrum of hope and despair for cultural production shared by the various members and associates of the Frankfurt School. It offers most to the reader fascinated by a pivotal epoch and its consequences.' Media International Australia 'The inclusion of [the] lesser well known academics is certainly a most refreshing aspect of the book, and cross readings and comparisons offer a stimulating account of understanding what constitutes Frankfurt School thinking, opening up new lines of inquiry in studying both critical theory and the sociology of intellectuals... this book is a valuable contribution to critical theory and media and communication studies from thoughtful scholars who perceptively revive the Frankfurt School tradition to make sense of the technologically assisted cultural processes and politics of our times.' LSE Review of Books Author InformationDavid Berry is a Senior Lecturer at Southampton Solent University, UK David Berry, Sanda Miller, Alan O'Connor, Philip Bounds, Robert E. Babe, Mike Wayne, Julian Petley, Hanno Hardt, Caroline Kamau. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||