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Index
Preface to the 1996 Edition
Foreword by Max Horkheimer
Introduction
Acknowledgments
1. The Creation of the Institut fur Sozialforschung and Its First Frankfurt Years
2. The Genesis of Critical Theory
3. The Integration of Psychoanalysis
4. The Institut's First Studies of Authority
5. The Institut's Analysis of Nazism
6. Aesthetic Theory and the Critique of Mass Culture
7. The Empirical Work of the Institut in the 1940's
8. Toward a Philosophy of History: The Critique of the Enlightenment
Epilogue
References
Bibliography
Index
The so-called Frankfurt School, composed of certain members of the Institut fur Sozialforschung (Ins
Although Cornelius never had any direct connection with the Institut, his influence on Horkheimer an
Yet although Horkheimer attacked Hegel's identity theory, he felt that nineteenth-century criticism
Hence the crucial importance of mediation (Vermittlung) for a correct theory of society. No facet of
Furthermore, by minimizing the role of childhood experiences (Erlebnisse, which were not the same as
In 1942, when this was written, Horkheimer did not yet despair that such "active resistance" might y
There were, to be sure, some similarities between his approach and theirs. Neumann, for example, min
society, had been systematically eradicated from what was increasingly an "affirmative culture."
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