Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation
When capitalism is clearly catastrophically out of control and its excesses cannot be sustained socially or ecologically, the ideas of Herbert Marcuse become as relevant as they were in the 1960s. This is the first English introduction to Marcuse to be published for decades, and deals specifically with his aesthetic theories and their relation to a critical theory of society.

Although Marcuse is best known as a critic of consumer society, epitomised in the classic One-Dimensional Man, Malcolm Miles provides an insight into how Marcuse's aesthetic theories evolved within his broader attitudes, from his anxiety at the rise of fascism in the 1930s through heady optimism of the 1960s, to acceptance in the 1970s that radical art becomes an invaluable progressive force when political change has become deadlocked.

Marcuse's aesthetics of liberation, in which art assumes a primary role in interrupting the operation of capitalism, made him a key figure for the student movement in the 1960s. As diverse forms of resistance rise once more, a new generation of students, scholars and activists will find Marcuse’s radical theory essential to their struggle.

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Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation
When capitalism is clearly catastrophically out of control and its excesses cannot be sustained socially or ecologically, the ideas of Herbert Marcuse become as relevant as they were in the 1960s. This is the first English introduction to Marcuse to be published for decades, and deals specifically with his aesthetic theories and their relation to a critical theory of society.

Although Marcuse is best known as a critic of consumer society, epitomised in the classic One-Dimensional Man, Malcolm Miles provides an insight into how Marcuse's aesthetic theories evolved within his broader attitudes, from his anxiety at the rise of fascism in the 1930s through heady optimism of the 1960s, to acceptance in the 1970s that radical art becomes an invaluable progressive force when political change has become deadlocked.

Marcuse's aesthetics of liberation, in which art assumes a primary role in interrupting the operation of capitalism, made him a key figure for the student movement in the 1960s. As diverse forms of resistance rise once more, a new generation of students, scholars and activists will find Marcuse’s radical theory essential to their struggle.

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Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation

Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation

by Malcolm Miles
Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation

Herbert Marcuse: An Aesthetics of Liberation

by Malcolm Miles

Paperback

$47.00 
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Overview

When capitalism is clearly catastrophically out of control and its excesses cannot be sustained socially or ecologically, the ideas of Herbert Marcuse become as relevant as they were in the 1960s. This is the first English introduction to Marcuse to be published for decades, and deals specifically with his aesthetic theories and their relation to a critical theory of society.

Although Marcuse is best known as a critic of consumer society, epitomised in the classic One-Dimensional Man, Malcolm Miles provides an insight into how Marcuse's aesthetic theories evolved within his broader attitudes, from his anxiety at the rise of fascism in the 1930s through heady optimism of the 1960s, to acceptance in the 1970s that radical art becomes an invaluable progressive force when political change has become deadlocked.

Marcuse's aesthetics of liberation, in which art assumes a primary role in interrupting the operation of capitalism, made him a key figure for the student movement in the 1960s. As diverse forms of resistance rise once more, a new generation of students, scholars and activists will find Marcuse’s radical theory essential to their struggle.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780745330389
Publisher: Pluto Press
Publication date: 02/05/2012
Series: Modern European Thinkers Series
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.32(w) x 8.46(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Malcolm Miles is Professor of Cultural Theory in the School of Architecture, Design & Environment, University of Plymouth; Visiting Professor of Aesthetics and Urban Regeneration in the School of Sociology & Criminology, Keele University; and author of Herbert Marcuse: an Aesthetics of Liberation (2011).

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Aesthetics and the Reconstruction of Society
2. The Artist and Social Theory
3. Affirmations
4. A Literature of Intimacy
5. Society as a Work of Art
6. The End of Utopia
7. The Aesthetic Dimension
8. Legacies and Practices
Notes
Index

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