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Theories of ideology : the powers of alienation and subjection /

Jan Rehmann reconstructs the different strands of ideology theories, ranging from Marx to Adorno/Horkheimer, from Gramsci to Stuart Hall, from Althusser to Foucault, from Bourdieu to W.F. Haug. He puts them into dialogue with each other and applies them to today's high-tech-capitalism.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Rehmann, Jan
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Leiden : Brill, 2013.
Colección:Historical materialism book series, 1570-1522 ; 54.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Machine generated contents note: 1. Twisted Preliminaries: The `Ideologistes' and Napoleon
  • 1.1. Ideology as a `natural science' of ideas
  • 1.2. A post-Jacobin state-ideology
  • 1.3. Napoleon's pejorative concept of ideology
  • 2. Ideology-Critique and Ideology-Theory According to Marx and Engels
  • 2.1. From `inverted consciousness' to `idealistic superstructures'
  • 2.1.1. The camera obscura and its critics
  • 2.1.2. A `naive sensuous empiricism'?
  • 2.1.3. Excursus to the young Marx's critique of religion
  • 2.1.4. Camera obscura as metaphor for `idealistic superstructure'
  • 2.1.5. `Ruling ideas' and `conceptive ideologists'
  • 2.2. The critique of fetishism in the Critique of Political Economy
  • 2.2.1. From the critique of religion to the critique of fetishism
  • 2.2.2. From ideology-critique to the critique of `objective thought-forms'
  • 2.2.3. The wage-form and the `true Eden' of human rights
  • 2.2.4. Capital-fetishism, the `trinity formula' and the `religion of everyday life'
  • 2.2.5. The `silent compulsion' of economic rule as ideology?
  • 2.2.6. `Science' between ideology and ideology-critique
  • 2.3. Did Marx develop a `neutral' concept of ideology?
  • 2.4. Engels's concept of `ideological powers'
  • 3. The Concept of Ideology from the Second International to `Marxism-Leninism'
  • 3.1. The repression of a critical concept of ideology
  • 3.2. Lenin: bourgeois or socialist ideology?
  • 3.3. Lenin's `operative' approach: self-determination and hegemony
  • 3.4. Ideology in `Marxist-Leninist' state-philosophy
  • 3.5. `Ideological relationships' in the philosophy of East Germany
  • 4. The Concept of Ideology from Lukacs to the Frankfurt School
  • 4.1. Gyorgy Lukacs: ideology as reification
  • 4.2. Horkheimer's and Adorno's critique of the `culture-industry'
  • 4.3. Abandoning the concept of ideology?
  • 4.4. The `gears of an irresistible praxis'
  • 4.5. Ideology as `instrumental reason' and `identitarian thought'
  • 4.6. From Marcuse to Habermas
  • and back to Max Weber?
  • 4.7. Taking the sting out of critical theory
  • 4.8. `Commodity-aesthetics' as ideological promise of happiness
  • 5. The Concept of Ideology in Gramsci's Theory of Hegemony
  • 5.1. A significant shift in translation
  • 5.2. Gramsci's critical concept of ideology
  • 5.3. The critique of common sense as ideology-critique
  • 5.4. Gramsci's concept of `organic ideology'
  • 5.5. `Ideology' as a category of transition toward a theory of hegemony
  • 5.6. The critique of corporatism and Fordism
  • 5.7. A new type of ideology-critique on the basis of a theory of hegemony
  • 6. Louis Althusser: Ideological State-Apparatuses and Subjection
  • 6.1. The relationship to Gramsci
  • 6.2. The theory of ideological state-apparatuses (ISA)
  • 6.3. A debate on `functionalism'
  • 6.4. `Ideology in general' and subject-constitution
  • 6.5. The derivation of the `imaginary' from Spinoza and Lacan
  • 6.6. Lacan's universalisation of subjection and alienation
  • 6.7. Can subjects talk back at interpellations?
  • 7. From the Collapse of the Althusser School to Poststructuralism and Postmodernism
  • 7.1. Michel Pecheux's discourse-theoretical development of Althusser's ideology-theory
  • 7.2. The post-Marxist turn of Ernest Laclau and Chantal Mouffe
  • 7.3. Stuart Hall: bridging the theory of hegemony and discourse-analysis
  • 7.4. Michel Foucault's neo-Nietzschean trajectory from ideology to discourse to power
  • 7.4.1. A peculiar Nietzschean-Heideggerian strand of `anti-humanism'
  • 7.4.2. The dissolution of Althusser's concept of ideology into `knowledge'
  • 7.4.3. The substitution of ideology-critique by `fictionalism'
  • 7.4.4. The introduction of a neo-Nietzschean concept of power
  • 7.4.5. `Relational power' or `phagocytic essence'?
  • 7.4.6. Foucault's `dispositif' and the `technologies' of power
  • a re-interpretation
  • 7.5. Poststructuralism and postmodernism
  • 7.5.1. Questions of definition
  • 7.5.2. Postmodernism's essentialist definition of modernity
  • 7.5.3. A component of neoliberal ideology?
  • 7.5.4. Theoretical loss: the dematerialisation of social life
  • 8. Pierre Bourdieu: `Field', `Habitus' and `Symbolic Violence'
  • 8.1. The development of the concept of field from the German Ideology
  • 8.2. Field against apparatus?
  • 8.3. Ideology, symbolic violence, habitus
  • disentangling a confused arrangement
  • 8.4. Bourdieu's contribution to the development of Althusser's model of interpellation
  • 8.5. A new determinism?
  • 9. Ideology-Critique with the Hinterland of a Theory of the Ideological: The `Projekt Ideologietheorie' (PIT)
  • 9.1. The resumption of Marx and Engels's critical concept of ideology
  • 9.2. The ideological at the crossroads of class-domination, state and patriarchy
  • 9.3. `Vergesellschaftung'
  • vertical, horizontal, and proto-ideological
  • 9.4. The dialectics of the ideological: compromise-formation, complementarity and antagonistic reclamation of the common
  • 9.5. Fascistic modifications of the ideological
  • 9.6. Policies of extermination and church-struggle in Nazi Germany
  • 9.7. Further ideology-theoretical studies
  • 10. Friedrich Hayek and the Ideological Dispositif of Neoliberalism
  • 10.1. The formation of neoliberal hegemony
  • 10.2. Hayek's frontal attack on `social justice'
  • 10.3. Overcoming `economy' by the game of `catallaxy'
  • 10.4. Hayek's construct of `negative' justice
  • 10.5. The religious structure of Hayek's market-radicalism
  • 10.6. A symptomatic contradiction between market-destiny and subject-mobilisation
  • 10.7. State and liberty: neoliberal discourse is permeated by its opposite
  • 10.8. The road to `disciplinary neoliberalism'
  • 10.9. Is the hegemony of neoliberal capitalism exhausted?
  • 11. The Unfulfilled Promises of the Late Foucault and Foucauldian `Governmentality-Studies'
  • 11.1. Foucault's mediation of the techniques of domination and of the self
  • 11.2. The enigmatic content of the concept of governmentality
  • 11.3. Eliminating the inner contradictions of neoliberal ideology
  • 11.4. A problematic equation of subjectivation and subjection
  • 11.5. Towards an ideology-theoretical re-interpretation of `governmentality-studies'.