T. J. Clark, in âFor A Left With No Future,â compares the âimmobilizedâ state of the present-day Left with the impasse of Enlightenment radicals in the years between the Restoration of 1815 and the Revolutions of 1848. He argues that any âreconstruction of the project of the Enlightenmentâ for today requires a âdeeperâ look at the history of the Left, and for that, â[t]he book we need to be readingâin preference to The Coming Insurrection, I feelâis Christopher Hillâs The Experience of Defeat.â
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THE FIRST EVER REACTION by the Victorian ruling class to âMarxismâ is found in a London Times leader of September 2, 1851 on âLiterature For The Poor,â âonly now and then when some startling fact is bought before us do we entertain even the suspicion that there is a society close to our own, and with which we are in the habits of daily intercourse, of which we are as completely ignorant as if it dwelt in another land, of another language in which we never conversed, which in fact we never saw.â
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CHRIS CUTRONE WRITES, âWhat the usual interpretive emphasis on LukĂĄcs occludes is that the Frankfurt School writers grappled not only with the problem of Stalinism but with that of âanti-Stalinismâ as well.â This statement is well founded, considering how Korschâs troubled relationship with Adorno and Horkheimer was paralleled by Sohn-Rethelâs with those two during the same period; not to mention the later dialogues Dunayevskaya had with Marcuse and Fromm.
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