BookShared
  • MEMBER AREA    
  • Grand Hotel Abyss: The Lives of the Frankfurt School

    (By Stuart Jeffries)

    Book Cover Watermark PDF Icon Read Ebook
    ×
    Size 24 MB (24,083 KB)
    Format PDF
    Downloaded 626 times
    Last checked 11 Hour ago!
    Author Stuart Jeffries
    “Book Descriptions: “Marvelously entertaining, exciting and informative.” —Guardian“An engaging and accessible history.” —New York Review of BooksThis group biography is “an exhilarating page-turner” and “outstanding critical introduction” to the work and legacy of the Frankfurt School, and the great 20th-century thinkers who created it (Washington Post).In 1923, a group of young radical German thinkers and intellectuals came together to at Victoria Alle 7, Frankfurt, determined to explain the workings of the modern world. Among the most prominent members of what became the Frankfurt School were the philosophers Walter Benjamin, Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse. Not only would they change the way we think, but also the subjects we deem worthy of intellectual investigation. Their lives, like their ideas, profoundly, sometimes tragically, reflected and shaped the shattering events of the twentieth century.Grand Hotel Abyss combines biography, philosophy, and storytelling to reveal how the Frankfurt thinkers gathered in hopes of understanding the politics of culture during the rise of fascism. Some of them, forced to escape the horrors of Nazi Germany, later found exile in the United States. Benjamin, with his last great work—the incomplete Arcades Project—in his suitcase, was arrested in Spain and committed suicide when threatened with deportation to Nazi-occupied France. On the other side of the Atlantic, Adorno failed in his bid to become a Hollywood screenwriter, denounced jazz, and even met Charlie Chaplin in Malibu.After the war, there was a resurgence of interest in the School. From the relative comfort of sun-drenched California, Herbert Marcuse wrote the classic One Dimensional Man, which influenced the 1960s counterculture and thinkers such as Angela Davis; while in a tragic coda, Adorno died from a heart attack following confrontations with student radicals in Berlin.By taking popular culture seriously as an object of study—whether it was film, music, ideas, or consumerism—the Frankfurt School elaborated upon the nature and crisis of our mass-produced, mechanized society. Grand Hotel Abyss shows how much these ideas still tell us about our age of social media and runaway consumption.”

    Google Drive Logo DRIVE
    Book 1

    Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism

    ★★★★★

    Benedict Anderson

    Book 1

    When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s

    ★★★★★

    John Ganz

    Book 1

    Berlin Childhood around 1900

    ★★★★★

    Walter Benjamin

    Book 1

    The Origin of Capitalism: A Longer View

    ★★★★★

    Ellen Meiksins Wood

    Book 1

    October: The Story of the Russian Revolution

    ★★★★★

    China Miéville

    Book 1

    At the Existentialist Café

    ★★★★★

    Sarah Bakewell

    Book 1

    The Society of the Spectacle

    ★★★★★

    Guy Debord

    Book 1

    Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and the Invention of the Self

    ★★★★★

    Andrea Wulf

    Book 1

    Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?

    ★★★★★

    Mark Fisher

    Book 1

    Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia

    ★★★★★

    Gilles Deleuze

    Book 1

    Herbert Marcuse

    ★★★★★

    Alasdair MacIntyre

    Book 1

    Fabian. Die Geschichte eines Moralisten

    ★★★★★

    Erich Kästner

    Book 1

    Essayism

    ★★★★★

    Brian Dillon

    Book 1

    Empire of Normality: Neurodiversity and Capitalism

    ★★★★★

    Robert Chapman

    Book 1

    The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society

    ★★★★★

    Jürgen Habermas