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4. Authors
Alexander, Bryan N. 1998. Jameson’s Adorno and the problem of Utopia. Utopian Studies 9.2: 51-57. Armstrong, Isobel. 1998. And beauty? A dialogue: Debating Adorno’s Aesthetic theory. Textual Practice 12.2: 269-89. Benzaquén, Adriana. 1998. Thought and Utopia in the writings of Adorno, Horkheimer, and Benjamin. Utopian Studies 9.2: 149-61. †Bertstein, Jay. 1999. Adorno on disenchantment: The skepticism of enlightened reason. Philosophy 74 (supplement): 305-28. Comay, Rebecca. 2000. Adorno’s siren song. New German Critique, no. 81: 21-48. †Cook, Deborah. 2002. Communication in constellation:
Adorno and Habermas on communicative practices under late capitalism.
----------. 2001. Adorno, ideology and ideology critique. Philosophy & Social Criticism 27.1: 1-20. ----------. 2001. Adorno on mass societies. Journal of Social Philosophy 32.1: 35-52. Dallmayr, Fred. 1997. The politics of nonidentity: Adorno, postmodernism—and Edward Said. Political Theory 25.1: 33-56. Duttmann, Alexander Garcia. 2000. Thinking as gesture: A note on the dialectic of enlightenment. New German Critique, no. 81: 143-52. Finke, Stale. 2001. Concepts and intuitions: Adorno after the linguistic turn. Inquiry 44: 171-200. †Finlayson, James Gordon. 2002. Adorno on the ethical and the ineffable. European Journal of Philosophy 10.1: 1-25. Gandesha, Samir. 2001. Enlightenment as tragedy: Reflections on Adorno’s ethics. Thesis Eleven, no. 65: 109-30. †Garloff, Katja. 2002. Essay, exile, efficacy: Adorno’s literary criticism. Monatshefte 94.1: 80-86. Geulen, Eva. 2000. Endgames: Reconstructing Adorno’s “end of art.” New German Critique, no. 81: 153-68. Geuss, Raymond. 1998. Art and criticism in Adorno’s aesthetics. European Journal of Philosophy 6.3: 297-317. Hahn, Susan. 1999. Authenticity and impersonality in Adorno’s aesthetics. Telos, no. 117: 60-78. Hammer, Espen. 2000. Minding the world. Philosophy & Social Criticism 26.1: 71-92. Kaufman, Robert 2001. Negatively capable dialectics: Keats, Vendler, Adorno, and the theory of the avant-garde. Critical Inquiry 27: 354-84. Jachec, Nancy. 1998. Adorno, Greenberg and modernist politics. Telos, no. 105: 105-18. Litvak, Joseph. 2001. Adorno now. Victorian Studies 44.1: 33-39. Martin, Stewart. 2000. Autonomy and anti-art: Adorno’s concept of avant-garde art. Constellations 7.2: 197-207. McBride, Douglas Brent. 1998. Romantics phantasms: Benjamin and Adorno on the subject of critique. Monatshefte 90.4: 465-87. Morgan, Ben. 2001. The project of the Frankfurt School. Telos, no. 119: 75-98. †Mullen, Amy. 2000. Adorno, art theory, and feminist
practice. Pepper, Thomas. 1994. Guilt by (un) free association: Adorno on romance et al. Modern Language Notes 109.5: 913-37. Pizer, John. 1993. Jameson’s Adorno, or, the persistence of the utopian. New German Critique, no. 58: 127-51. †Richter, Gerhard. 2002. Who’s afraid of the ivory tower? A conversation with Theodor W. Adorno. Monatshefte 94.1: 10-23. Roberts, David. 1999. Art and myth: Adorno and Heidegger. Thesis Eleven, no. 58: 19-34. Schoolman, Morton. 1997. Toward a politics of darkness: Individuality and its politics in Adornoâs aesthetics. Political Theory 25.1: 57-92. Sherman, David. 2001. Adorno’s Kierkegaardian debt. Philosophy & Social Criticism 27.1: 77-106. Sherratt, Yvonne 2000. Adorno and Horkheimer’s concept of “enlightenment.”British Journal for the History of Science 8.3: 521-44. ----------. 1999. The Dialectic of enlightenment: A contemporary reading. History of the Human Scinces 12.3: 35-54. Varon, Jeremy. 1993. The dreadful concatenation: Modernity and massacre in Todorov, Adorno and Horkheimer. New German Critique, no. 59: 155-92. Wheeler, Brett R. 2001. Antisemetism as distorted politics: Adorno on the public sphere. Jewish Social Studies 7.2: 114-48. Wilcock, Evelyn. 2000. Negative identity: Mixed German Jewish descent as a factor in the reception of Theodor Adorno. New German Critique, no. 81: 169-87. Zuckermann, Moshe. 1999. Authoritarianism, the Holocaust and the culture industry: Aspects of education in the philosophy of the Frankfurt School. Dialogue & Universalism 9.3/4: 13-35. |
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