In this significant and very timely book, the author of The Technological Society, The Political illusion, and Propaganda asks a tremendous question and shows that the answer we give it is decisive for the future of our society: Can we learn from history what revolution really is necessary for our survival? Can we, that is distinguish between senseless, ineffectual revolt or rebellion and a genuine revolution that can alter fundamentals?
In his basic, closely reasoned way, Jacques Ellul examines past and recent history in light" of the current overwhelming preoccupation with revolution, which seems to have become the daily bread of Western man's thoughts and actions, the immediate explanation for every historical movement. He insists on examining the possibility that today we are projecting onto past events a fairly recent and distorted image of revolution.
The new image was created by Marx in the nineteenth century, and Ellul questions how long we can continue to live on his legacy; More important, he suggests that Marx may have brought about an abrupt deviation of the necessary revolutionary current and given a false meaning to the word "revolution." Is all our talk about Marxian revolution talk about reality, or a way of filling a void with words? Finally, among so many social eddies and agitations, are we today caught up in a really revolutionary movement-or are we being led into blind combat by false lights that in reality are reflections in distorting mirrors? Are we capable of discerning the real Revolution, the needed Revolution?
In this significant and very timely book, the author of The Technological Society, The Political illusion, and Propaganda asks a tremendous question and shows that the answer we give it is decisive for the future of our society: Can we learn from history what revolution really is necessary for our survival? Can we, that is distinguish between senseless, ineffectual revolt or rebellion and a genuine revolution that can alter fundamentals?
In his basic, closely reasoned way, Jacques Ellul examines past and recent history in light" of the current overwhelming preoccupation with revolution, which seems to have become the daily bread of Western man's thoughts and actions, the immediate explanation for every historical movement. He insists on examining the possibility that today we are projecting onto past events a fairly recent and distorted image of revolution.
The new image was created by Marx in the nineteenth century, and Ellul questions how long we can continue to live on his legacy; More important, he suggests that Marx may have brought about an abrupt deviation of the necessary revolutionary current and given a false meaning to the word "revolution." Is all our talk about Marxian revolution talk about reality, or a way of filling a void with words? Finally, among so many social eddies and agitations, are we today caught up in a really revolutionary movement-or are we being led into blind combat by false lights that in reality are reflections in distorting mirrors? Are we capable of discerning the real Revolution, the needed Revolution?
Autopsy of Revolution
312Autopsy of Revolution
312Paperback
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781606089774 |
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Publisher: | Wipf & Stock Publishers |
Publication date: | 06/13/2012 |
Series: | Jacques Ellul Legacy |
Pages: | 312 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d) |