Wendy Brown is Class of 1936 First Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. Her most recent books are Walled States, Waning Sovereignty and Undoing the Demos: Neoliberalism's Stealth Revolution. Peter E. Gordon is the Amabel B. James Professor of History at Harvard University. His most recent books are Continental Divide: Heidegger, Cassirer, Davos, and Adorno and Existence. Max Pensky is Professor of Philosophy at Binghamton University. He is the author of MelancholyDialectics and The Ends of Solidarity.
"If you are concerned by this political moment, first of all,
--organize and vote. Then read these sharp critical reflections. In
dialogue with each other, they give welcome new life in particular
to Hayek, Adorno, and Tocqueville as they think through the
possible futures of the rationality, culture, and habitus of
democratic life."-- "Bonnie Honig, Brown University"
"In this slim volume, three authors bring critical theory to bear
on the swelling, confounding conjuncture of neoliberal, market
fundamentalism and right-wing, nativist, racist, reactionary
populist authoritarianism. Brown braids together Milton Friedman,
Friedrich Hayek, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Herbert Marcuse to give
an account of aggrieved power and anointed wounds. Gordon revisits
Theodor Adorno's The Authoritarian Personality, showing that Adorno
would read the contemporary authoritarian culture industry as
(following Leo Lowenthal) an exercise of psychoanalysis in reverse,
finding a play-acting mob enjoying a simulacrum of desublimated
repression that permits the economic status quo to persist
unchanged. Pensky, via Alexis de Toqueville and Adorno, reads a
cultural-functional numbing via legal-bureaucratic authoritarianism
that gently infuses contemporary psychic structures, displacing and
hollowing out the political potential for the powers of
subjectivity. Is such a pallid life always already implicit in the
functioning of liberal democracy under capital as its subjects vote
in authoritarianism? Can critique act as a bulwark against
authoritarianism? Recommended."-- "CHOICE"
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