'Herbert Marcuse' (
July 19,
1898 –
July 29,
1979) was a
German-born
philosopher,
sociologist and a member of the
Frankfurt School.
Biography and career
Herbert Marcuse was born in
Berlin to a Jewish family and served in the German Army, caring for horses in Berlin during the
First World War. He then became a member of a Soldiers' Council that participated in the aborted
socialist Spartacist uprising. After completing his Ph.D. thesis at the
University of Freiburg in
1922 on the German
Künstlerroman, he moved back to Berlin, where he worked in publishing. He returned to
Freiburg in
1929 to write a
habilitation with
Martin Heidegger, which was published in 1932 as ''
Hegel's Ontology and Theory of Historicity''. With his academic career blocked by the rise of the Third Reich, in
1933 Marcuse joined the
Frankfurt Institute for Social Research, emigrating from Germany that same year, going first to
Switzerland, then the
United States, where he became a
naturalized citizen in
1940.
Although he never returned to Germany to live, he remained one of the major theorists associated with the
Frankfurt School, along with
Max Horkheimer and
Theodor Adorno. In
1940 he published ''Reason and Revolution'', a dialectical work studying
Hegel and
Marx.
During
World War II Marcuse first worked for the
U.S. Office of War Information (OWI) on anti-Nazi propaganda projects. In 1943 he transferred to the
Office of Strategic Services (OSS). His work for the OSS involved research on Nazi Germany and denazification. After the dissolution of the OSS in 1945, Marcuse was employed by the
US Department of State until 1951 as head of the Central European section, retiring after the death of his first wife in 1951.
In
1952 he began a teaching career as a political theorist, first at
Columbia University and
Harvard, then at
Brandeis University from
1958 to
1965, where he was professor of philosophy and politics, and finally (he was by now past the usual retirement age), at the
University of California, San Diego. He was a friend and collaborator of the historical sociologist
Barrington Moore, Jr. and of the political philosopher
Robert Paul Wolff. In the post-war period, he was the most explicitly political and left-wing member of the Frankfurt School, continuing to identify himself as a
Marxist, a socialist, and a
Hegelian.
Marcuse's critiques of
capitalist society (especially his
1955 synthesis of
Marx and
Freud, ''
Eros and Civilization'', and his
1964 book ''
One-Dimensional Man'') resonated with the concerns of the leftist student movement in the
1960s. Because of his willingness to speak at student protests, Marcuse soon became known as "the father of the
New Left," a term he disliked and rejected. His work heavily influenced intellectual discourse on
popular culture and scholarly
popular culture studies. He had many speaking engagements in the US and Europe in the late
1960s and in the
1970s. He died on
July 29,
1979, after having suffered a stroke during a visit to Germany. He had spoken at the Frankfurt ''Römerberggespräche'', and second-generation Frankfurt School theorist
Jürgen Habermas had invited him to the Max-Planck-Institute for the Study of the Scientific-Technical World in Starnberg.
Marcuse wrote the world-acclaimed "Soviet-Marxism. A critical analysis", defending the arrested dissident
Rudolf Bahro ("Die Alternative. Zur Kritik des real existierenden Sozialismus", engl. as "The Alternative for Eastern Europe") and to discuss in 1979 his theories of a "change from within", as it is called now
[1].
Many radical scholars and activists were influenced by him, for example
Angela Davis,
Abbie Hoffman,
Rudi Dutschke, and
Robert M. Young. (See the List of Scholars and Activists link, below.) Among those who critiqued him from the left were Marxist-Humanist
Raya Dunayevskaya, and fellow German emigre,
Paul Mattick, who both subjected ''One-Dimensional Man'' to a Marxist critique. Marcuse's 1965 essay "
Repressive Tolerance", in which he claimed capitalist
democracies can have
totalitarian aspects, has been criticized by conservatives.
[2] Marcuse argues that genuine tolerance does not tolerate support for repression, since doing so ensures that marginalized voices will remain unheard. He characterizes tolerance of repressive speech as "inauthentic." Instead, he advocates a discriminatory form of tolerance that does not allow so-called "repressive" intolerance to be voiced.
Herbert Marcuse was not related to the émigré literary scholar
Ludwig Marcuse (1894-1971); but may have been a distant relation of the Berlin sexologist
Max Marcuse (1877-1963)
[3]. His grandson,
Harold Marcuse, is a
professor of modern and contemporary
German history at the
University of California, Santa Barbara.
Major works
★ ''The Struggle Against Liberalism in the Totalitarian View of the State'' (
1934)
★ ''
Reason and Revolution'' (
1941)
★ ''
Eros and Civilization'' (
1955)
★ ''
Soviet Marxism. A critical Analysis'' (
1958)
★ ''
One-Dimensional Man'' (
1964)
★ ''
Repressive Tolerance'' (
1965)
★ ''
Negations'' (
1968)
★ ''
An Essay on Liberation'' (
1969)
★ ''
Counter-Revolution and Revolt'' (
1972)
★ ''
The Aesthetic Dimension'' (
1978)
See also
★
Georg Lukács
★
Walter Benjamin
★
Theodor Adorno
★
Max Horkheimer
★
Erich Fromm
★
Jürgen Habermas
Secondary literature
★
Christian Fuchs (2005) Emanzipation! Technik und Politik bei Herbert Marcuse. Aachen: Shaker. ISBN 3-8322-3999-5.
★
Christian Fuchs (2005) Herbert Marcuse interkulturell gelesen. Interkulturelle Bibliothek Vol. 15. Nordhausen: Bautz. ISBN 3-88309-175-8.
★
Douglas Kellner (1984) Herbert Marcuse and the Crisis of Marxism. London: Macmillan. ISBN 9780520052956.
External links
★
Articles By Herbert Marcuse
★
Comprehensive 'Official' Herbert Marcuse Website, by one of Marcuse's grandsons, with full bibliographies of primary and secondary works, and full texts of many important works
★
Excellent narrative biography by A. Buick, at worldsocialism.org
★
Detailed intellectual biography and essays, by Douglas Kellner, Marcuse scholar at UCLA
★
"Herbert Marcuse (on-line) Archive" at marxists.org
★
Eros and Civilization (1955) text excerpts online at marxists.org
★
One-Dimensional Man (1964), partial text online at marcuse.org
★
Repressive Tolerance (1965), complete essay text online at marcuse.org
★
Complete bibliography of Marcuse's published works, at marcuse.org
★
Long list of secondary works about Marcuse, at marcuse.org
★
List of scholars and activists influenced by Marcuse, at marcuse.org
★
Herbert's Hippopotamus: Marcuse and Revolution in Paradise, biographic documentary on google video
★
Bernard Stiegler,
"Spirit, Capitalism, and Superego"