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Autonomy and Solidarity: Interviews with Jürgen Habermas

TLDR
In the last half decade or so, Jurgen Habermas has increasingly employed the interview format, both as a means of presenting his changing views on philosophical topics in an accessible way, and as a way of debating current social and political issues as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Over the last half decade or so, Jurgen Habermas has increasingly employed the interview format, both as a means of presenting his changing views on philosophical topics in an accessible way, and as a means of debating current social and political issues This new, expanded edition of "Autonomy and Solidarity" includes an additional five interviews in which Habermas discusses such themes as the history and significance of the Frankfurt School, the social and political development of post-war Germany, the moral status of civil disobedience, the implications of the "Historians' Dispute", and the function of national identity in the modern world Never before published autobiographical material covering Habermas' early years at the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research is followed by an extended philosophical interrogation of his latest thinking on the relations between ethics, morality and law With an extended introduction by Peter Dews, exploring the status and prospects of Critical Theory in the light of the recent revolutionary transformations in Europe, "Autonomy and Solidarity" should be of interest and value both to newcomers and those already familiar with Habermas' thought

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Culture and the public sphere

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TL;DR: McGuigan as mentioned in this paper discusses cultural policy as a manifestation of cultural politics in the widest sense and illustrates the case with examples from recent cultural policy initiatives in Britain, the United States and Australia.
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On the Logic of the Performative Contradiction: Habermas and the Radical Critique of Reason

TL;DR: This article argued that Adorno's radical critique of reason actually pursues consistency in its radical critique on reason, and that this does not mean his project is necessarily incoherent or inconsistent.
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How Revolutionary Were the Bourgeois Revolutions

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Journal ArticleDOI

‘MOT Your Life’: Critical Management Studies and the Management of Everyday Life

TL;DR: The authors argue that the discourses, techniques and imperatives associated with the management of work organizations are increasingly colonizing the everyday sphere of human communication and sense-making, and argue that such discourses constitute a material signifier of what is an ongoing managerialist colonization of everyday life.