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Social Theory and Modernity
Critique, Dissent, and Revolution
- Timothy W. Luke - Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, USA
Other Titles in:
Political Science & International Relations
Political Science & International Relations
October 1990 | 278 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
Social Theory and Modernity combines the analytical techniques of political theory and comparative politics as a method for conducting innovative inquiry and research in political science. The focus of political theory, for example, results in new issues for historical and cross-national comparative analysis - whereas comparative analysis provides new parameters for analyzing the ideology of social institutions. Luke elaborates upon Rousseau's discursive style and critical methods, Marx's historical materialism, Marcuse's instrumental rationality, Weber's interpretive method, Gramsci's theoretical tactics, Cabral's theory of critique and revolution and Foucault's system of political and social analysis. The book concludes by offering an analysis of the moral and ideological influence of behaviour and the link between ideology and political economy, especially in modern society.
PART ONE: MARXOLOGIES: CRITICAL SOCIAL THEORY AND MODERNITY
Introduction and Overview
PART TWO: TECHNOLOGY, TECHNIQUE AND SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION
On Techno-Power
Technique in Marx's Method of Political Economy
Gramsci and Revolution
PART THREE: INSTRUMENTAL REASON AND POPULAR REVOLUTION
The Dialectics of Social Critique in Rousseau
A Phenomenological/Freudian Marxism? Marcuse's Critique of Advanced Industrial Society
After One-Dimensionality
PART FOUR: POWER, DISCOURSE AND CULTURE IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD
Cabral's Marxism
Discourses of Modernization and Development
Foucault and the Discourses of Power