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The Association for Adorno Studies

The Association for Adorno Studies

Monthly Archives: August 2020

CfP: Adorno and Identity

31 Monday Aug 2020

Posted by Martin Shuster in Adorno Studies (journal), Call for Papers, Frankfurt School, Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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Black thought, Non-Identity

Jonathon Catlin asked us to share the following call for papers:

CfP: Adorno and Identity – Virtual Workshop and Special Issue of Adorno Studies

A virtual workshop on “Adorno and Identity,” with papers intended for publication in a special issue of the journal Adorno Studies, is now accepting abstracts from potential contributors.

Negative dialectics, Theodor Adorno wrote, “is suspicious of all identity.” Nevertheless, identity is one of the central concepts linking together Adorno’s wide-ranging corpus. This issue pursues a timely and interdisciplinary revisitation of the notions of identity, the nonidentical, and negative identity in Adorno, prompted by several recent studies: Eric Oberle’s Theodor Adorno and the Century of Negative Identity, Fumi Okiji’s Jazz As Critique: Adorno and Black Expression Revisited, and Oshrat Silberbusch’s Adorno’s Philosophy of the Nonidentical: Thinking as Resistance. These works serve as a common point of departure for revisiting Adorno’s thought at a moment in which identity has become a central and hotly debated concept. The goal of this issue is twofold: to use Adorno’s work to develop more conceptually robust and nuanced notions of identity and nonidentity, and to advance critical theory by connecting Adorno’s work to broader conversations about identity.

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New article: “Adorno’s Critique of the New Right-Wing Extremism: How (Not) to Face the Past, Present, and Future”

21 Friday Aug 2020

Posted by Martin Shuster in Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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extremism, right-wing

Harry Dahms wrote to us about the publication of his new article on Adorno’s recently published lecture course. You can find it here: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/disclosure/vol29/iss1/14/

Here’s the abstract:

This paper serves three purposes relating to a lecture Adorno gave in 1967 on “the new right-wing extremism” that was on the rise then in West Germany; in 2019, the lecture was published in print for the first time in German, to wide acclaim, followed by an English translation that appeared in 2020. First, it is important to situate the lecture in its historical and political context, and to relate it to Adorno’s status as a critical theorist in West Germany. Secondly, Adorno’s diagnosis of the new right-wing extremism (and related forms of populism) and his conclusions about how to resist and counteract it are relevant to the current political situation in the United States, even though he presented his analysis more than half a century ago. Thirdly, Adorno’s lecture provided the model for a type of education that is oriented toward enabling students to face unpleasant facts about modern social life in constructive ways, including recognizing and resisting right-wing populism and extremism, in an age that imposes greater and greater uncertainty and challenges on individuals. In conclusion, it is evident that in a rapidly changing world, the “tricks” of right-wing populists and extremists are astonishingly unoriginal and static, which in part may explain their appeal and effectiveness. Reading the pedagogy Adorno suggested as a practical application of his critical theory highlights the importance of enabling individuals to recognize the “normalcy” of proliferating experiences of cognitive dissonance, and to respond to such experiences by adopting a productive rather than defeatist stance with regard to the increasing complexity and the intensifying contradictions of modern societies in the twenty-first century, as they are accompanied by myriad possibilities and threats.

New Book: Adorno and Neoliberalism

19 Wednesday Aug 2020

Posted by Martin Shuster in Publications, Theodor W. Adorno

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Late Capitalism, neoliberalism, Political Philosophy

Charles Prusik wrote to us announcing the publication of his new book, Adorno and Neoliberalism: The Critique of Exchange Society, published by Bloomsbury in August of 2020. The foreword is written by Deborah Cook.

Here is the publisher’s blurb:

The first book to investigate the relevance of Theodor W. Adorno’s work for theorizing the age of neoliberal capitalism. Through an engagement with Adorno’s critical theory of society, Charles Prusik advances a novel approach to understanding the origins and development of neoliberalism. Offering a corrective to critics who define neoliberalism as an economic or political doctrine, Prusik argues that Adorno’s dialectical theory of society can provide the basis for explaining the illusions and forms of domination that structure contemporary life. 

Prusik explains the importance of Marx’s critique of commodity fetishism in shaping Adorno’s work and focuses on the related concepts of exchange, ideology, and natural history as powerful tools for grasping the present. Through an engagement with the ideas of neoliberal economic theory, Adorno and Neoliberalism criticizes the naturalization of capitalist institutions, social relations, ideology, and cultural forms. Revealing its origins in the crises of the Fordist period, Prusik develops Adorno’s analyses of class, exploitation, monopoly, and reification to situate neoliberal policies as belonging to the fundamental antagonisms of capitalist society.

Martin Jay in conversation…

13 Thursday Aug 2020

Posted by Martin Shuster in Critical Theory, Frankfurt School, Links of Interest, Publications

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Book Event, Frankfurt School, Martin Jay, Paul Breines, Rob Kaufman, Theodor W. Adorno

Martin Jay will be in conversation with Paul Breines, with opening remarks by Rob Kaufman. The event will occur on Zoom, August 25, 2020 @ 6PM PT / 9PM EST. You can find more details here.

The event is presented by City Lights Booksellers & Publishers in conjunction with University of California at Berkeley Program in Critical Theory and Verso Books.

Martin Jay, Sidney Hellman Ehrman Professor of History Emeritus, and former Co-Director of The Program in Critical Theory, UC Berkeley, and Paul Breines, Professor of History Emeritus, Boston College

Tuesday, August 25, 6 pm PST/9 pm EST
Please note: the link for the free Zoom registration needed in order to attend this event will be forthcoming at City Lights’ URL: http://www.citylights.com/info/?fa=event&event_id=3678

Discussing Martin Jay’s just-released essay collection, Splinters in Your Eye: Frankfurt School Provocations (Verso Books, 2020).

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