By Douglas Kellner
HERBERT MARCUSE
Herbert Marcuse gained world
renown during the 1960s as a philosopher, social theorist, and political
activist, celebrated in the media as "father of the New Left."
University professor and author of many books and articles, Marcuse won notoriety
when he was perceived as both an influence on and defender of the "New
Left" in the United States and Europe. His theory of
"one-dimensional" society provided critical perspectives on
contemporary capitalist and state communist societies and his notion of
"the great refusal" won him renown as a theorist of revolutionary
change and "liberation from the affluent society." Consequently, he
became one of the most influential intellectuals in the United States during
the 1960s and into the 1970s. And yet, ultimately, it may be his contributions
to philosophy that are most significant and in this entry I shall attempt to
specify Marcuse's contributions to contemporary philosophy and his place in the
narrative of continental philosophy.
Heidegger, Marxism, and Philosophy
Heidegger, Marxism, and Philosophy
Marcuse was born in 1898 in
Berlin and after serving with the German army in World War I, he went to
Freiburg to pursue his studies. After receiving his Ph.D. in literature in
1922, and following a short career as a bookseller in Berlin, he returned to Freiburg
in 1928 to study philosophy with Martin Heidegger, then one of the most
influential thinkers in Germany. Marcuse's first published article in 1928
attempted a synthesis of the philosophical perspectives of phenomenology,
existentialism, and Marxism, a synthesis which decades later would be carried
out again by various "existential" and "phenomenological"
Marxists, such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, as well as
American students and intellectuals in the New Left.
Marcuse argued that much
Marxist thought had degenerated into a rigid orthodoxy and thus needs concrete
lived and "phenomenological" experience to revivify the theory; at
the same time, Marcuse believed that Marxism neglected the problem of the
individual and throughout his life he was concerned with individual liberation
and well-being in addition to social transformation and the possibilities of a
transition from capitalism to socialism.
Marcuse continued to maintain
throughout his life that Heidegger was the greatest teacher and thinker that he
had ever encountered. The Marcuse archives contain a full set of his lecture
notes from the late 1920s until he left Frieburg in 1933 that document the
intensity of his interest in Heidegger's philosophy and his devotion to his
lectures. Yet Marcuse was highly dismayed concerning Heidegger's political
affiliations with national socialism and after completing a "Habilitations
Dissertation" on _Hegel's Ontology and the Theory of Historicity_, he
decided to leave Freiburg in 1933 to join the _Institut fur Sozialforschung_
(Institute for Social Research) which was located in Frankfurt, but which would
soon open branch offices at Geneva and then at Columbia University, both of
which Marcuse would join.
His study of _Hegel's Ontology
and Theory of Historicity_ (1932) contributed to the Hegel renaissance that was
taking place in Europe by stressing the importance of Hegel's ontology of life
and history, as well as his idealist theory of spirit and his dialectics.
Moreover, Marcuse published the first major review in 1933 of Marx's just
published _Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844_; the review
anticipated the tendency to revise interpretations of Marxism from the
standpoint of the works of the early Marx. These works revealed Marcuse to be
an astute student of Germany philosophy and he was emerging as one of the most
promising theorists of his generation.
Critical Theory of Society
Critical Theory of Society
As a member of the Institute
for Social Research, Marcuse soon became deeply involved in their interdisciplinary
projects which included working out a model for critical social theory,
developing a theory of the new stage of state and monopoly capitalism,
articulating the relationships between philosophy, social theory, and cultural
criticism, and providing a systematic analysis and critique of German fascism.
Marcuse deeply identified with the "Critical Theory" of the Institute
and throughout his life was close to Max Horkheimer, T.W. Adorno, and others in
the Institute's inner circle.
In 1934, Marcuse -- a German
jew and radical -- fled from Nazism and emigrated to the United States where he
lived for the rest of his life. The Institute for Social Research was granted
offices and an academic affiliation with Columbia University, where Marcuse
worked during the 1930s and early 1940s. His first major work in English,
_Reason and Revolution_ (1941), traced the genesis of the ideas of Hegel, Marx,
and modern social theory. It demonstrated the similarities between Hegel and
Marx, and introduced many English speaking readers to the Hegelian-Marxian
tradition of dialectical thinking and social analysis. The text continues to be
one of the best introductions to Hegel and Marx and one of the best analyses of
the categories and methods of dialectical thinking.
In 1941, Marcuse joined the
OSS (Office of Secret Services) and then worked in the State Department,
becoming the head of the Central European bureau by the end of World War II.
After serving in the U.S. government from 1941 through the early 1950's, which
Marcuse always claimed was motivated by a desire to struggle against fascism,
he returned to intellectual work and published _Eros and Civilization_ in 1955
which attempted an audacious synthesis of Marx and Freud and sketched the
outlines of a non-repressive society. While Freud argued in _Civilization and
Its Discontents_ that civilization inevitably involved repression and
suffering, Marcuse argued that other elements in Freud's theory suggested that
the unconscious contained evidence of an instinctual drive toward happiness and
freedom. This evidence is articulated, Marcuse suggests, in daydreams, works of
art, philosophy, and other cultural products. Based on this reading of Freud
and study of an emancipatory tradition of philosophy and culture, Marcuse sketched
the outlines of a non-repressive civilization which would involve libidinal and
non-alienated labor, play, free and open sexuality, and production of a society
and culture which would further freedom and happiness. His vision of liberation
anticipated many of the values of the 1960s counterculture and helped Marcuse
to become a major intellectual and political influence during that decade.
Marcuse argued that the
current organization of society produced "surplus repression" by
imposing socially unnecessary labor, unnecessary restrictions on sexuality, and
a social system organized around profit and exploitation. In light of the
diminution of scarcity and prospects for increased abundance, Marcuse called
for the end of repression and creation of a new society. His radical critique
of existing society and its values, and his call for a non-repressive
civilization, elicited a dispute with his former colleague Erich Fromm who
accused him of "nihilism" (toward existing values and sociedty) and
irresponsible hedonism. Marcuse had earlier attacked Fromm for excessive
"conformity" and "idealism" and repeated these charges in
the polemical debates over his work following the publication of _Eros and
Civilization_ which heatedly discussed Marcuse's use of Freud, his critique of
existing civilization, and his proposals for an alternative organization of
society and culture.
In 1958, Marcuse received a
tenured position at Brandeis University and became one of the most popular and
influential members of its faculty. During his period of government work,
Marcuse had been a specialist in fascism and communism and he published a
critical study of the Soviet Union in 1958 (_Soviet Marxism_) which broke the
taboo in his circles against speaking critically of the USSR and Soviet
communism. While attempting to develop a many-sided analysis of the USSR,
Marcuse focused his critique on Soviet bureaucracy, culture, values, and the
differences between the Marxian theory and the Soviet version of Marxism.
Distancing himself from those who interpreted Soviet communism as a
bureaucratic system incapable of reform and democratization, Marcuse pointed to
potential "liberalizing trends" which countered the Stalinist
bureaucracy which indeed eventually materialized in the 1980s under Gorbachev.
Next, Marcuse published a
wide-ranging critique of both advanced capitalist and communist societies in
_One-Dimensional Man_ (1964). This book theorized the decline of revolutionary
potential in capitalist societies and the development of new forms of social
control. Marcuse argued that "advanced industrial society" created
false needs which integrated individuals into the existing system of production
and consumption. Mass media and culture, advertising, industrial management,
and contemporary modes of thought all reproduced the existing system and
attempt to eliminate negativity, critique, and opposition. The result was a
"one-dimensional" universe of thought and behavior in which the very
aptitude and ability for critical thinking and oppositional behavior was
withering away.
Not only had capitalism
integrated the working class, the source of potential revolutionary opposition,
but they had developed new techniques of stabilization through state policies
and the development of new forms of social control. Thus Marcuse questioned two
of the fundamental postulates of orthodox Marxism: the revolutionary
proletariat and inevitability of capitalist crisis. In contrast with the more
extravagant demands of orthodox Marxism, Marcuse championed non-integrated forces
of minorities, outsiders, and radical intelligentsia and attempted to nourish
oppositional thought and behavior through promoting radical thinking and
opposition.
_One-Dimensional Man_ was
severely criticized by orthodox Marxists and theorists of various political and
theoretical commitments. Despite its pessimism, it influenced many in the New
Left as it articulated their growing dissatisfaction with both capitalist
societies and Soviet communist societies. Moreover, Marcuse himself continued
to defend demands for revolutionary change and defended the new, emerging
forces of radical opposition, thus winning him the hatred of establishment
forces and the respect of the new radicals.
The New Left and Radical Politics
The New Left and Radical Politics
_One-Dimensional Man_ was
followed by a series of books and articles which articulated New Left politics
and critiques of capitalist societies in "Repressive Tolerance"
(1965), _An Essay on Liberation_ (1969), and _Counterrevolution and Revolt_
(1972). "Repressive Tolerance" attacked liberalism and those who
refused to take a stand during the controversies of the 1960s. It won Marcuse
the reputation of being an intransigent radical and ideologue for the Left. _An
Essay on Liberation_ celebrated all of the existing liberation movements from the
Viet Cong to the hippies and exhilarated many radicals while further alienating
establishment academics and those who opposed the movements of the 1960s.
_Counterrevolution and Revolt_, by contrast, articulates the new realism that
was setting in during the early 1960s when it was becoming clear that the most
extravagant hopes of the 1960s were being dashed by a turn to the right and
"counterrevolution" against the 1960s.
In 1965, Brandeis refused to
renew his teaching contract and Marcuse soon after received a position at the
University of California at La Jolla where he remained until his retirement in
the 1970s. During this period -- of his greatest influence -- Marcuse also
published many articles and gave lectures and advice to student radicals all
over the world. He travelled widely and his work was often discussed in the
mass media, becoming one of the few American intellectuals to gain such
attention. Never surrendering his revolutionary vision and commitments, Marcuse
continued to his death to defend the Marxian theory and libertarian socialism.
A charismatic teacher, Marcuse's students began to gain influential academic
positions and to promote his ideas, making him a major force in U.S.
intellectual life.
Marcuse also dedicated much of
his work to aesthetics and his final book, _The Aesthetic Dimension_ (1979),
briefly summarizes his defense of the emancipatory potential of aesthetic form
in so called "high culture." Marcuse thought that the best of the
bourgeois tradition of art contained powerful indictments of bourgeois society
and emancipatory visions of a better society. Thus he attempted to defend the
importance of great art for the projection of emancipation and argued that
cultural revolution was an indispensable part of revolutionary politics.
Marcuse's work in philosophy
and social theory generated fierce controversy and polemics, and most studies
of his work are highly tendentious and frequently sectarian. Although much of
the controversy involved his critiques of contemporary capitalist societies and
defense of radical social change, in retrospect, Marcuse left behind a complex
and many-sided body of work comparable to the legacies of Ernst Bloch, Georg
Lukacs, T.W. Adorno, and Walter Benjamin.
Marcuse's Legacy
Marcuse's Legacy
Since his death in 1979,
Herbert Marcuse's influence has been steadily waning. The extent to which his
work has been ignored in progressive circles is curious, as Marcuse was one of
the most influential radical theorists of the day during the 1960s and his work
continued to be a topic of interest and controversy during the 1970s. While the
waning of the revolutionary movements with which he was involved helps explain
Marcuse's eclipse in popularity, the lack of new texts and publications has
also contributed. For while there have been a large number of new translations
of works by Benjamin, Adorno, and Habermas during the past decade, few new
publications of untranslated or uncollected material by Marcuse have appeared,
although there have been a steady stream of books on Marcuse (see References
and Further Writings below). In addition, while there has been great interest
in the writings of Foucault, Derrida, Baudrillard, Lyotard, and other French
"postmodern," or "poststructuralist," theorists, Marcuse
did not fit into the fashionable debates concerning modern and postmodern
thought. Unlike Adorno, Marcuse did not anticipate the postmodern attacks on
reason and his dialectics were not "negative." Rather he subscribed
to the project of reconstructing reason and of positing utopian alternatives to
the existing society -- a dialectical imagination that has fallen out of favor
in an era that rejects totalizing thought and grand visions of liberation and
social reconstruction.
The neglect of Marcuse may be
altered through the publication of a wealth of material, much of it unpublished
and unknown, that is found in the Herbert Marcuse archives in the
Stadtsbibliothek in Frankfurt. During the summers of 1989 and 1991, and the
Fall of 1990, I went through the archival material and was astonished at the
number of valuable unpublished texts. The Marcuse archive is a treasure house
and plans are shaping up for Routledge to publish many volumes of this
material. Some extremely interesting manuscripts on war, technology, and
totalitarianism from the 1940s and some unpublished book manuscripts, articles,
and lectures from the 1960s and 1970s may lead to a Marcuse Renaissance, or at
least awaken interest in his work.
Such a return to Marcuse is
plausible, first, because he addresses issues that continue to be of relevance
to contemporary theory and politics and the unpublished manuscripts contain
much material pertinent to contemporary concerns which could provide the basis
for a rebirth of interest in Marcuse's thought (for examples of the contemporary
relevance of Marcuse, see the studies in Bokina and Luke, 1994). Secondly,
Marcuse provides comprehensive philosophical perspectives on domination and
liberation, a powerful method and framework for analyzing contemporary society,
and a vision of liberation that is richer than classical Marxism, other
versions of Critical Theory, and current versions of postmodern theory.
Indeed, Marcuse presents rich
philosophical perspectives on human beings and their relationship to nature and
society, as well as subtantive social theory and radical politics. In
retrospect, Marcuse's vision of liberation -- of the full development of the
individual in a non-repressive society -distinguishes his work, along with
sharp critique of existing forms of domination and oppression, and he emerges
in this narrative as a philosopher of forces of domination and liberation.
Primarily, a philosopher, Marcuse's work lacked the sustained empirical
analysis in some versions of Marxist theory and the detailed conceptual
analysis found in many versions of political theory. Yet he constantly showed
how science, technology, and theory itself had a political dimension and
produced a solid body of ideological and political analysis of many of the
dominant forms of society, culture, and thought during the turbulent era in
which he lived and he constantly struggled for a better world.
Thus, I believe that Marcuse
overcomes the limitations of many current varieties of philosophy and social
theory and that his writings provide a viable starting-point for theoretical
and political concerns of the present age. In particular, his articulations of
philosophy with social theory, cultural criticism, and radical politics seem an
enduring legacy. While mainstream academic divisions of labor isolate
philosophy from other disciplines -- and other disciplines from philosophy --,
Marcuse and the critical theorists provide philosophy with an important
function within social theory and cultural criticism and develop philosophical
perspectives in interaction with concrete analyses of society, politics, and
culture in the present age. This dialectical approach thus assigns philosophy
continued functions and important in the theoretical discourses of our era.
In addition, Marcuse emerges
as a sharp, even prescient, social analyist. He was one of the first on the
left who both developed a sharp critique of Soviet Marxism and yet foresaw the
liberalizing trends in the Soviet Union (see Marcuse, 1958). After the
uprisings in Poland and Hungary in 1956 were ruthlessly suppressed, many
speculated that Khrushchev would have to roll back his program of
de-Stalinization and crack down further. Marcuse, however, differed, writing in
1958: "The Eastern European events were likely to slow down and perhaps
even reverse de-Stalinization in some fields; particularly in international
strategy, a considerable 'hardening' has been apparent. However, if our
analysis is correct, the fundamental trend will continue and reassert itself
throughout such reversals. With respect to internal Soviet developments, this
means at present continuation of 'collective leadership,' decline in the power
of the secret police, decentralization, legal reforms, relaxation in
censorship, liberalization in cultural life" (Marcuse, 1958, p. 174).
In part as a response to the
collapse of Communism and in part as a result of new technological and economic
conditions, the capitalist system has been undergoing disorganization and
reorganization. Marcuse's loyalty to Marxism always led him to analyze new conditions
within capitalist societies that had emerged since Marx. Social theory today
can thus build on this Marcusean tradition in developing critical theories of
contemporary society grounded in analyses of the transformations of capitalism
and emergence of a new global economic world system. For Marcuse, social theory
was integrally historical and must conceptualize the salient phenomena of the
present age and changes from previous social formations. While the postmodern
theories of Baudrillard and Lyotard claim to postulate a rupture in history,
they fail to analyze the key constituents of the changes going on, with
Baudrillard even declaring the "end of political economy." Marcuse,
by contrast, always attempted to analyze the changing configurations of capitalism
and to relate social and cultural changes to changes in the economy.
Moreover, Marcuse always paid
special attention to the important role of technology in organizing
contemporary societies and with the emergence of new technologies in our time the
Marcusean emphasis on the relationship between technology, the economy,
culture, and everyday life is especially important. Marcuse also paid attention
to new forms of culture and the ways that culture provided both instruments of
manipulation and liberation. The proliferation of new media technologies and
cultural forms in recent years also demands a Marcusean perspective to capture
both their potentialities for progressive social change and the possibilities
of more stream-lined forms of social domination. While postmodern theories also
describe new technologies, Marcuse always related the economy to culture and
technology, seeing both emancipatory and dominating potentials, while theorists
like Baudrillard are one-dimensional, often falling prey to technological
determinism and views of society and culture that fail to see positive and
emancipatory potentials.
Finally, while versions of
postmodern theory, like Baudrillard, have renounced radical politics, Marcuse
always attempted to link his critical theory with the most radical political
movements of the day and to thus politicize his philosophy and social teory.
Thus, I am suggesting that Marcuse's thought continues to provide important
resources and stimulus for radical theory and politics in the present age.
Marcuse himself was open to new theoretical and political currents, yet
remained loyal to those theories which he believed provided inspiration and
substance for the tasks of the present age. Consequently, as we confront the
theoretical and political problems of the day, I believe that the works of
Herbert Marcuse provide important resources for our current situation and that
a Marcusean renaissance could help inspire new theories and politics for the
contemporary era, providing continental philosophy with new impulses and
tasks.
Writings
Marcuse, Herbert: Negations (Boston: Beacon Press, 1968).
Marcuse, Herbert: Reason and Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941; reprinted Boston: Beacon Press, 1960).
Marcuse, Herbert: Eros and Civilization (Boston: Beacon Press, 1955).
Marcuse, Herbert: Soviet Marxism (New York: Columbia University Press 1958; second edition 1988).
Marcuse, Herbert: One Dimensional Man (Boston: Beacon Press, 1964; second edition, 1991).
Marcuse, Herbert: An Essay on Liberation (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969).
Marcuse, Herbert: Counterrevolution and Revolt (Boston: Beacon Press, 1972).
Marcuse, Herbert: Studies in Critical Philosophy (Boston: Beacon Press, 1973).
Marcuse, Herbert: The Aesthetic Dimension (Boston: Beacon Press, 1978).
References and Further Reading
Alford, C. Fred: Science and the Revenge of Nature: Marcuse and Habermas (Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1985).
John Bokina and Timothy J. Lukes, editors, Marcuse: New Perspectives (Lawrence, Kansas: University of Kansas Press, 1994).
Institut fΔr Sozialforschung: Kritik und Utopie im Werk von Herbert Marcuse (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992).
Kellner, Douglas: Herbert Marcuse and the Crisis of Marxism (London and Berkeley: Macmillan and University of California Press, 1984).
Lukes, Timothy J.: The Flight Into Inwardness: An Exposition and Critique of Herbert Marcuse's Theory of Liberative Aesthetics (Cranbury, N.J., London, and Toronto: Associated University Presses, 1986).
Robert Pippin, et al, editors, Marcuse. Critical Theory and the Promise of Utopia (South Hadley, Mass.: Bergin and Garvey, 1988).
Writings
Marcuse, Herbert: Negations (Boston: Beacon Press, 1968).
Marcuse, Herbert: Reason and Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1941; reprinted Boston: Beacon Press, 1960).
Marcuse, Herbert: Eros and Civilization (Boston: Beacon Press, 1955).
Marcuse, Herbert: Soviet Marxism (New York: Columbia University Press 1958; second edition 1988).
Marcuse, Herbert: One Dimensional Man (Boston: Beacon Press, 1964; second edition, 1991).
Marcuse, Herbert: An Essay on Liberation (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969).
Marcuse, Herbert: Counterrevolution and Revolt (Boston: Beacon Press, 1972).
Marcuse, Herbert: Studies in Critical Philosophy (Boston: Beacon Press, 1973).
Marcuse, Herbert: The Aesthetic Dimension (Boston: Beacon Press, 1978).
References and Further Reading
Alford, C. Fred: Science and the Revenge of Nature: Marcuse and Habermas (Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1985).
John Bokina and Timothy J. Lukes, editors, Marcuse: New Perspectives (Lawrence, Kansas: University of Kansas Press, 1994).
Institut fΔr Sozialforschung: Kritik und Utopie im Werk von Herbert Marcuse (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992).
Kellner, Douglas: Herbert Marcuse and the Crisis of Marxism (London and Berkeley: Macmillan and University of California Press, 1984).
Lukes, Timothy J.: The Flight Into Inwardness: An Exposition and Critique of Herbert Marcuse's Theory of Liberative Aesthetics (Cranbury, N.J., London, and Toronto: Associated University Presses, 1986).
Robert Pippin, et al, editors, Marcuse. Critical Theory and the Promise of Utopia (South Hadley, Mass.: Bergin and Garvey, 1988).
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