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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: David ShermanPublisher: State University of New York Press Imprint: State University of New York Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.431kg ISBN: 9780791471166ISBN 10: 0791471160 Pages: 340 Publication Date: 05 June 2008 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Abbreviations Used in the Text and Notes Introduction Part I. Adorno's Relation to the Existential and Phenomenologicial Traditions 1. Adorno and Kierkegaard Adorno's Critique of Kierkegaard Adorno's Kierkegaardian Debt 2. Adorno and Heidegger Adorno's Critique of Heidegger Adorno and Heidegger Are Irreconcilable 3. Adorno and Husserl Part II. Subjectivity in Sartre's Existential Phenomenology 4. The Frankfurt School's Critique of Sartre Adorno on Sartre Marcuse's Critique of Being and Nothingness 5. Sartre's Relation to His Predecessors in the Phenomenological and Existential Traditions Being Knowing Death 6. Sartre's Mediating Subjectivity Sartre's Decentered Subject and Freedom Being-for-Others: The Ego in Formation Bad Faith and the Fundamental Project Situated Freedom and Purified Reflection Part III. Adorno's Dialectic of Subjectivity 7. The (De)Formation of the Subject The Dawn of the Subject Science, Morality, Art Adorno, Sartre, Anti-Semitism, and Psychoanalysis 8. Subjectivity and Negative Dialectics Freedom Mode History Model Negative Dialectics, Phenomenology, and Subjectivity Notes Bibliography IndexReviews""...Sherman does an excellent job using the Frankfurt School as a foil to develop a skilled defence of Sartre's early philosophy. This analysis would be useful not just for researchers interested in the comparisons of German and French philosophy but also for anyone interested in the debates surrounding Sartre's work from the 1930s and '40s."" - Symposium ""David Sherman has not only written an excellent book linking Sartre and Adorno, two much misunderstood and unfairly marginalized thinkers in recent continental philosophy, but he has also shown their surprising complementarity on an issue that itself has been all but dismissed, the inescapable significance of the subject. His book, accordingly, has two vital themes, the largely unappreciated relationship between two seminal philosophers and the misguided obstinacy that would deny any role to subjectivity in philosophy. This is a terrific book that provides an opening for a new and much-needed reexamination of some worn and by now dogmatic themes in both poststructuralism and second-generation critical theory."" - Robert C. Solomon, author of Dark Feelings, Grim Thoughts: Experience and Reflection in Camus and Sartre ""David Sherman's Sartre and Adorno develops an exciting encounter between the ideas of two of the most important thinkers in the contemporary moment. The Frankfurt School critique of Sartre, and, more generally, existentialism and phenomenology, is succinctly presented, as are the positive contributions to developing theoretical perspectives on subjectivity by both Adorno and Sartre. Sherman thus provides a very well-balanced dialectical critique that provides new insights into both Sartre and Adorno, while staging a significant confrontation between existential phenomenology and the Frankfurt School."" - Douglas Kellner, author of Media Spectacle and the Crisis of Democracy ""Sherman renders comprehensible some of the most abstract and riddling philosophical issues within continental philosophy. In so doing, the book will bring together readers of critical theory and existentialism in ways that are really very rare."" - Max Pensky, editor of The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the Postmodern ""This is the first systematic, book-length comparison of Sartre and Adorno, a study that has been needed for some time now and on multiple levels. Sherman has done a superb job with this comparison, and it is important that the pivot around which it occurs is the question of subjectivity, which is also closely connected to the problem of political agency. He brings into communication two of the most important Marxist thinkers of the twentieth century; therefore, it also is part of an account of the broad Marxist intellectual milieu of the past century."" - Bill Martin, author of Ethical Marxism: The Categorical Imperative of Liberation """...Sherman does an excellent job using the Frankfurt School as a foil to develop a skilled defence of Sartre's early philosophy. This analysis would be useful not just for researchers interested in the comparisons of German and French philosophy but also for anyone interested in the debates surrounding Sartre's work from the 1930s and '40s."" - Symposium ""David Sherman has not only written an excellent book linking Sartre and Adorno, two much misunderstood and unfairly marginalized thinkers in recent continental philosophy, but he has also shown their surprising complementarity on an issue that itself has been all but dismissed, the inescapable significance of the subject. His book, accordingly, has two vital themes, the largely unappreciated relationship between two seminal philosophers and the misguided obstinacy that would deny any role to subjectivity in philosophy. This is a terrific book that provides an opening for a new and much-needed reexamination of some worn and by now dogmatic themes in both poststructuralism and second-generation critical theory."" - Robert C. Solomon, author of Dark Feelings, Grim Thoughts: Experience and Reflection in Camus and Sartre ""David Sherman's Sartre and Adorno develops an exciting encounter between the ideas of two of the most important thinkers in the contemporary moment. The Frankfurt School critique of Sartre, and, more generally, existentialism and phenomenology, is succinctly presented, as are the positive contributions to developing theoretical perspectives on subjectivity by both Adorno and Sartre. Sherman thus provides a very well-balanced dialectical critique that provides new insights into both Sartre and Adorno, while staging a significant confrontation between existential phenomenology and the Frankfurt School."" - Douglas Kellner, author of Media Spectacle and the Crisis of Democracy ""Sherman renders comprehensible some of the most abstract and riddling philosophical issues within continental philosophy. In so doing, the book will bring together readers of critical theory and existentialism in ways that are really very rare."" - Max Pensky, editor of The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the Postmodern ""This is the first systematic, book-length comparison of Sartre and Adorno, a study that has been needed for some time now and on multiple levels. Sherman has done a superb job with this comparison, and it is important that the pivot around which it occurs is the question of subjectivity, which is also closely connected to the problem of political agency. He brings into communication two of the most important Marxist thinkers of the twentieth century; therefore, it also is part of an account of the broad Marxist intellectual milieu of the past century."" - Bill Martin, author of Ethical Marxism: The Categorical Imperative of Liberation" ...Sherman does an excellent job using the Frankfurt School as a foil to develop a skilled defence of Sartre's early philosophy. This analysis would be useful not just for researchers interested in the comparisons of German and French philosophy but also for anyone interested in the debates surrounding Sartre's work from the 1930s and '40s. - Symposium David Sherman has not only written an excellent book linking Sartre and Adorno, two much misunderstood and unfairly marginalized thinkers in recent continental philosophy, but he has also shown their surprising complementarity on an issue that itself has been all but dismissed, the inescapable significance of the subject. His book, accordingly, has two vital themes, the largely unappreciated relationship between two seminal philosophers and the misguided obstinacy that would deny any role to subjectivity in philosophy. This is a terrific book that provides an opening for a new and much-needed reexamination of some worn and by now dogmatic themes in both poststructuralism and second-generation critical theory. - Robert C. Solomon, author of Dark Feelings, Grim Thoughts: Experience and Reflection in Camus and Sartre David Sherman's Sartre and Adorno develops an exciting encounter between the ideas of two of the most important thinkers in the contemporary moment. The Frankfurt School critique of Sartre, and, more generally, existentialism and phenomenology, is succinctly presented, as are the positive contributions to developing theoretical perspectives on subjectivity by both Adorno and Sartre. Sherman thus provides a very well-balanced dialectical critique that provides new insights into both Sartre and Adorno, while staging a significant confrontation between existential phenomenology and the Frankfurt School. - Douglas Kellner, author of Media Spectacle and the Crisis of Democracy Sherman renders comprehensible some of the most abstract and riddling philosophical issues within continental philosophy. In so doing, the book will bring together readers of critical theory and existentialism in ways that are really very rare. - Max Pensky, editor of The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the Postmodern This is the first systematic, book-length comparison of Sartre and Adorno, a study that has been needed for some time now and on multiple levels. Sherman has done a superb job with this comparison, and it is important that the pivot around which it occurs is the question of subjectivity, which is also closely connected to the problem of political agency. He brings into communication two of the most important Marxist thinkers of the twentieth century; therefore, it also is part of an account of the broad Marxist intellectual milieu of the past century. - Bill Martin, author of Ethical Marxism: The Categorical Imperative of Liberation Author InformationDavid Sherman is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Montana at Missoula and is the coauthor (with Leo Rauch) of Hegel's Phenomenology of Self-Consciousness: Text and Commentary, also published by SUNY Press. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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