Contesting Hierarchical Oppositions: The Dialectics of Adorno and Lacan

In Alfred J. Drake (ed.), New Essays on the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory. Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 168-192 (2009)
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Abstract

Modern capitalist societies are plagued by a series of oppositions, such as the subject/object, theory/practice, and the mind/body opposition. The problem with these oppositions is that they appear in an absolute opposition and hierarchical relation, making the negative pole (the object, practice, and the body) appear inferior to the positive pole (the subject, theory, and the mind). Furthermore, the “inferior” pole is often unconsciously linked to women, racial minorities, and working-class people, reinforcing injustices towards them. In this chapter, I read Theodor W. Adorno with Jacques Lacan to explain how these oppositions are connected and different from one another, and what we can do to challenge them, and the injustices they engender.

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Claudia Leeb
Washington State University

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