
Critical Theory and Feeling: The Affective Politics of the Early Frankfurt School - Paperback
Critical Theory and Feeling: The Affective Politics of the Early Frankfurt School - Paperback
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by Simon Mussell (Author)
This book examines the vital role of affect and feeling within the work of the early Frankfurt School. The author investigates a range of concepts - including melancholia, hope, (un)happiness, objects, and mimesis - and argues that a contemporary reading of critical theory needs to accommodate an adequate understanding of affect.
Front Jacket
In this book, Simon Mussell explores the crucial role played by feeling and affect within the early work of the Frankfurt School. Engaging with recent developments in the field of affect theory, he argues that critical theory has always had an affective politics at its heart. While one of the leading legacies of the Frankfurt School aligns it with a rationalist critique of ideology and mass culture, Mussell draws attention to critical theory's affective, extra-rational side. Aiming to move beyond conventional readings of key texts, he addresses a selection of topics that meet at the intersection of critique and affect: melancholia, hope, (un)happiness, mimesis and objects. Such themes have received little attention since the philosophical appropriation and gradual de-politicization of critical theory. Against this background, Mussell strives to re-establish the connection between thought and feeling, and to restate the political, visceral and vital demands of the early Frankfurt School. Bringing contemporary theory and interpretation to bear on the work of such key thinkers as Adorno, Benjamin, Bloch and Kracauer, Critical theory and feeling outlines both how and why any renewal of critical theory today needs to reckon with the politics of affect. The book will prove an excellent resource to advanced students, researchers and leading scholars working primarily in critical theory, variants of Marxist social and political thought and affect theory.
Back Jacket
In this book, Simon Mussell explores the crucial role played by feeling and affect within the early work of the Frankfurt School. Engaging with recent developments in the field of affect theory, he argues that critical theory has always had an affective politics at its heart.
While one of the leading legacies of the Frankfurt School aligns it with a rationalist critique of ideology and mass culture, Mussell draws attention to critical theory's affective, extra-rational side. Aiming to move beyond conventional readings of key texts, he addresses a selection of topics that meet at the intersection of critique and affect: melancholia, hope, (un)happiness, mimesis and objects. Such themes have received little attention since the philosophical appropriation and gradual de-politicization of critical theory. Against this background, Mussell strives to re-establish the connection between thought and feeling, and to restate the political, visceral and vital demands of the early Frankfurt School. Bringing contemporary theory and interpretation to bear on the work of such key thinkers as Adorno, Benjamin, Bloch and Kracauer, Critical theory and feeling outlines both how and why any renewal of critical theory today needs to reckon with the politics of affect. The book will prove an excellent resource to advanced students, researchers and leading scholars working primarily in critical theory, variants of Marxist social and political thought and affect theory.Author Biography
Simon Mussell is an independent researcher and editor



















