Der eindimensionale Mensch

Studien zur Ideologie der fortgeschrittenen Industriegesellschaft

Hardcover, 282 pages

German language

Published April 16, 1967 by Luchterhand Fachverlag.

OCLC Number:
256239789

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4 stars (7 reviews)

Der eindimensionale Mensch ist eines der bekanntesten Werke des deutsch-amerikanischen Soziologen und Philosophen Herbert Marcuse. Es erschien 1964 in den USA unter dem Titel One-Dimensional Man und wurde drei Jahre später in der Übersetzung von Alfred Schmidt auch in Deutschland verlegt. Der Untertitel der deutschen Ausgabe lautet: Studien zur Ideologie der fortgeschrittenen Industriegesellschaft. Marcuse wurde mit dem Werk in den 1960er Jahren zum Mentor der deutschen Studentenbewegung.

(Quelle: Wikipedia)

35 editions

Review of 'One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Third time reading this book all the way through. It's a good and enlightening text. His explorations of how critical, negative, thinking becomes increasingly impossible still holds true today. I also find the critique of technology and technics fascinating, especially the emphasis on technology developing in the modern era as a dominating force. Even though Marcuses philosophy of technology is ambivalent concerning whether its is a mere instrument or if technics have some substantial dominating content, I think the latter opens for a far more interesting discussion, especially concerning what we must do if we want to overcome capitalism. An overcoming of capitalism would probably also entail some form of transformation or revolution in technology. At the same time, the text is severely lacking when it comes to a more general understanding of capitalism. Trapped in the engelsian and second international interpretation of Capital, critical theory here as elsewhere are …

Review of 'One-Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology of Advanced Industrial Society' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I found this book very difficult to read. Individual ideas made sense, and some of them I would like to explore more deeply, but once the discussion began, I became lost in the language and logic of social theory, which is not a field I have any previous knowledge of. So although individual ideas made sense, when I got to the end of a chapter I had no idea what I'd read. Which is really too bad because I think the author had some useful insights into modern Western society ... I'm just not sure what they are!

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