New book: The Archives of Critical Theory
Blog: Political Theory - Habermas and Rawls
Abstract
The Archives of Critical Theoryed. by Isabelle Aubert & Marcos Nobre(Springer Verlag, 2023)282 pagesDescriptionOn the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the foundation of the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt am Main, in 1923, this book aims at shedding light on the archives of some of the key thinkers of Critical Theory of Society, also well known as "Frankfurt School". To pay homage to this current of thought, this contributed volume aims to make the archives speak for themselves, to show the public the quantity of unpublished material still existing by the authors of the Critical Theory which are now in funds in different parts of the world (in Germany, in Italy, or in the United States), and to show that Critical Theory remains alive 100 years after its inception.The volume starts by presenting the archives of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, the thinkers who inspired Critical Theory, and the archives of the Institute for Social Research itself. Then it dedicates separate sections to the archives of Walter Benjamin, Max Horkheimer, Theodor W. Adorno, Friedrich Pollock, Herbert Marcuse, Leo Löwenthal and Jürgen Habermas. The book is composed of chapters written by researchers and editors who worked in the different fonds, as well as chapters written by or interviews with researchers who were or are in charge of some of the archives, or who are especially familiar with the material.Contents [preview]Introduction: Researching the Archives of Critical Theory [preview] - Isabelle Aubert & Marcos Nobre Publishing Marx-Engels-Nachlass: Archive, Editions, and Theoretical Implications [preview] - Olavo Ximenes Into the Walter Benjamin Archive: An Interview with Ursula Marx - Fernando BeeBenjamin Anarchivist - Antonin Wiser The Attitude of the German People: The Institute of Social Research Archive as Contemporary History - Dirk Braunstein & Maischa Gelhard The Role of Empirical Research in Theodor W. Adorno's Thought: A Personal Experience at the Archive of the Institute for Social Research - Adriano JanuárioWorking on Cultural Memory: The Literary Estate of Max Horkheimer in the Frankfurt University Library - Gunzelin Schmid NoerrThe Material Part of Theory: The IfS Exile in Geneva and the Correspondence between Max Horkheimer & Juliette Favez - Olivier VoirolNot Just Director, Methodologist, or Partner: A Brief History of the Reception of Horkheimer's Work - Paulo Yamawake Adorno and the Archiving of the Ephemeral: Remarks on His Literary Estate - Michael Schwarz Adorno and the Post-war Artistic Debates: A Perspective Through the Archives - Raquel Patriota & Ricardo Lira da Silva T.W. Adorno, H. Becker, and the Challenges of Education in an "Administered World" (1955–1969): Unpublished Radio Conversations from the Theodor W. Adorno Archive - Aurélia Peyrical Symbiosis and Dispersion: The Friedrich Pollock Papers - Philipp Lenhard Leo Löwenthal and Herbert Marcuse: Analysis of the Enemy and Volumes from the Marcuse Archive - Peter-Erwin Jansen & Inka Engel Archive Beyond Files: A Brief Note on a Personal Experience in the Marcuse Archive - Inara Luisa Marin Critical Theory and Primary Source Research: Subjective Reflections on Working in the Herbert Marcuse and Max Horkheimer Archives - John Abromeit The Habermas Papers: An Interview with Roman Yos [preview] - Pedro Zan & Rafael Palazi Two Letters Between Jürgen Habermas and Karl-Otto Apel, Dated 1965: Comments on the Exchange - Roman Yos Letter from Jürgen Habermas to Herbert Marcuse, July 10, 1978: Translation of the Letter and Comment - Isabelle Aubert Appendix: Practical Information on the Archives [pdf]
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