Neo-Marxism: Difference between revisions
From Polcompball Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Content added Content deleted
Antonio 1555 (talk | contribs) m (→Enemies) |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
|dislikes = The Culture industry <br> The Bourgeoisie <br> |
|dislikes = The Culture industry <br> The Bourgeoisie <br> |
||
Jordan B. Peterson}} |
Jordan B. Peterson}} |
||
'''Neo-Marxism''' is an ideology that seeks to incorporate new elements from other intellectual traditions into [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|classical Marxism]], such as psychoanalysis |
'''Neo-Marxism''' is an ideology that seeks to incorporate new elements from other intellectual traditions into [[File:Ormarxf.png]] [[Marxism|classical Marxism]], such as psychoanalysis, critical theory, and sometimes existentialism. Broadly speaking Neo Marxism incorporates Max Weber's understanding of social inequality into Marxist Philosophy. Some of the Most famous Neo-Marxist concepts are Theodore Adorno's and max Horkheimer Idea of the Culture Industry where they proposed that popular culture is akin to a factory producing standardized cultural goods—films, radio programmes, magazines, etc.—that are used to manipulate mass society into passivity, and Antonio Gramsci's theory of Cultural Hegemony. He is the arch enemy of [[File:Petersonism.png]] [[Conservative Liberalism|Jordan B. Peterson]]. |
||
Overall, Neo-Marxism is a broad ideology and umbrella term for a diverse range of heterodox Marxist ideologies, philosophies and schools of thought, including Eco-Marxism, Situationism, Structural Marxism, Marxist Feminism, Analytic Marxism, Post-Marxism, Western Marxism, Hegelian Marxism, Freudo-Marxism, the Frankfurt School, Neo-Marxian Economics, Autonomism, and many others. |
Overall, Neo-Marxism is a broad ideology and umbrella term for a diverse range of heterodox Marxist ideologies, philosophies and schools of thought, including Eco-Marxism, Situationism, Structural Marxism, Marxist Feminism, Analytic Marxism, Post-Marxism, Western Marxism, Hegelian Marxism, Freudo-Marxism, the Frankfurt School, Neo-Marxian Economics, Autonomism, and many others. |