An Essay on Liberation
An Essay on Liberation is a 1969 book by the Frankfurt School philosopher Herbert Marcuse.
Summary
The author of One-Dimensional Man argues that the time for utopian speculation has come. Marcuse argues that advanced industrial society has rendered the traditional conception of human freedom obsolete, and outlines new possibilities for contemporary human liberation "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,".[1]
Publication history
An Essay on Liberation was first published by Beacon Press in 1969.[2]
Reception
The author Brian Easlea writes that Marcuse, having in the past been attacked by Marxists for his "quite unambiguous indictment of science and perhaps feeling that he had directed too much attention away from the rulers of advanced industrial society", apparently "reversed direction" in An Essay on Liberation by endorsing science and technology as "great vehicles of liberation".[3]
References
- ^ Marcuse 1969, pp. –vii–x, 3–91.
- ^ Marcuse 1969, p. iv.
- ^ Easlea 1981, p. 25.
Bibliography
- Books
- Easlea, Brian (1981). Science and Sexual Oppression: Patriarchy's Confrontation with Woman and Nature. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0 297 77894 3.
- Marcuse, Herbert (1969). An Essay on Liberation. Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-0595-9.
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- Hegel's Ontology and the Theory of Historicity (1932)
- Reason and Revolution (1941)
- Eros and Civilization (1955)
- Soviet Marxism: A Critical Analysis (1958)
- One-Dimensional Man (1964)
- A Critique of Pure Tolerance (1965)
- An Essay on Liberation (1969)
- Counterrevolution and Revolt (1972)
- The Aesthetic Dimension (1977)
- Repressive desublimation
- Technological rationality
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