Thirty-five years ago Joseph Gabel pub-lished a modern
masterpiece, which in 1975 appeared in English as False
Con-sciousness: An Essay on Reificalion . Combining his special
knowledge of existential psychiatry, axiology, Marx-ism, and
political history, Gabel pro-posed the utterly novel idea that
victims of serious mental disturbances (espe-cially paranoia and
schizophrenia) re-produce those distorted thought pat-terns
commonly associated with ideo-logical beliefs at the collective
level. Such beliefs initially had been laid bare in the 1920s by
Gabel's intellectual progenitors, Karl Mannheim and George Lukacs.
Gabel's remarkable innovation was to transfer the private crisis of
mental collapse into the analytic frame-work previously reserved
for ideological critique, making him an expert on what was later
called "the micro-macro prob-lem." Ideologies and the Corruption of
Thought includes Gabel's essays over the last 40 years,
characteristically treating micro and macro theoretical matters
simultaneously. Originally writ-ten in French and German, they have
been recast in idiomatic English and bibliographically updated.
Using a unique mode and vocabulary of analy-sis, Gabel offers
theoretical investiga-tions of McCarthyism and Stalinism (original
and more recent types), as well as Althusser, Orwell, and Jonathan
Swift in his capacity as a psychiatric theorist. He also explores
anti-Zionism, anti-Semitism, and a fascinating case study of a
paranoid who regarded him-self as the pope. In addition this volume
includes a range of general commentar-ies on ideological "thought,"
utopianism, and false consciousness.
This rich feast of social and political analysis and theory
illuminates a range of contemporary concerns--racism, Utopian
fantasy, ethnocentrism, anti-Semitism, the interplay of social
struc-ture and mental illness, and ideological transformations of
social life--which only Gabel's unique mixture of the clini-cal and
the political could achieve. It will be studied with interest by
all theo-rists and politically alert readers in the social
sciences, philosophy, and related fields of study.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!