CounterPunch recently republished two compelling articles about Herbert Marcuse. Charles Reitz’s study, “When Marxist Intellectuals Collaborated With the ...
Herbert Marcuse was one of the most famous philosophers of the 1960s, a counterculture guru to students who spray-painted his words across the United States and Europe. Now, amid a revival of interest ...
In agreement with the highly respected recent work of Daniel Immerwahr and David Vine and other contemporary radical scholars ...
Bless the American university, that exemplar of pluralism. Was it a playful University of Pennsylvania scheduler who managed to assign to the same all-purpose Houston Hall over a few days in October ...
“All liberation depends on the consciousness of servitude,” wrote Herbert Marcuse in 1964. By liberation, the German-American academic made abundantly clear he meant bringing central planning to ...
Herbert Marcuse was the single most famous person who ever taught at [University of California San Diego], and there was no living connection to him, no evidence of Marcuse having been there," says ...
Herbert Marcuse arrived at Brandeis in 1954 with almost no scholarly reputation. He'd never held a full-time teaching post, hadn't published a book since 1941, and had spent much of his professional ...
For scholars, the discovery of a long-forgotten manuscript is the academic equivalent of hitting the jackpot. Such a find can ignite years of discussion and renewed interest in the author and the work ...
To celebrate National Engineers Week -- of course you knew Feb. 17-23 is National Engineers Week, right? -- MIT Press interviews Matthew Wisnioski, author of their book “Engineers for Change: ...
BERLIN — The grand boulevard of Friedrichstrasse runs through the center of this once-divided city, from West Berlin through Checkpoint Charlie and then into the former East Berlin. It ends at a ...
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