Intellectuals : aesthetics, politics, academics

Bibliographic Information

Intellectuals : aesthetics, politics, academics

Bruce Robbins, editor

(Cultural politics, 2)

University of Minnesota Press, c1990

  • : pbk.

Available at  / 19 libraries

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Includes bibliographical notes and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Intellectuals so the arguement goes, are an endangered species. Once at the centre of crucial debates about politics and culture, today they have forsaken their proud and public-spirited independence and retreated to academia where they pursue such esoteric subjects as post-modern aethetics and post-structuralist theory. The essays in this volume disputre this diagnosis and re-examine the controversy over the role of the intellectual in society. They place intellectuals in a specific historical context and evaluate their real and potential role in the circumstances that define our public life - the media, government bureaucracy, the new social movements. In so doing, these essays seek to find a new ground for the intellectual from where to carry out the responsibilities of public opposition. The volume is divided into sections to theory, interviews and historical cases.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 Theory: on intellectuals, Stanley Aronowitz
  • toward an effective intellectual - Foucault or Gramsci?, R.Radhakrishanan
  • defenders of the faith and the new class, Andrew Ross. Part 2 Interviews: American intellectuals and Middle East politics, Edward W.Said
  • criticism, feminism, and the institution, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
  • women, academics, and the professional-managerial class, Barbara Ehrenreich. Part 3 Historical cases: peculiarities of the English in metanarratives of knowledge and power, Jonathan Arac
  • the old right and the new Jerusalem - Elizabeth Barrett Browning's intellectual practice, Deidre David
  • from political dissent to to scholarly integration - the Frankfurt school in American government 1942-1949, Alfons Sollner
  • new brooms at Fawlty towers - Colin MacCabe and Cambridge English, David Simpson
  • espionage as vocation - Raymond Williams' loyalties, Bruce Robbins
  • the scholar-warrior versus the children of Mao - Conor Cruise O'Brien in South Africa, John Higgins
  • making the difference - Paul de Man, fascism, and deconstruction, Christopher Prendergast
  • the spectacle of intellect in a media age - cultural representations and the David Abraham, Paul de Man, and Victor Farias cases, Dana Polan.

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