ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1984, this study deals with a number of influential figures in the European tradition of Marxist theories of aesthetics, ranging from Lukacs to Benjamin, through the Frankfurt School, to Brecht and the Althusserians. Pauline Johnson shows that, despite the great diversity in these theories about art, they all formulate a common problem, and she argues that an adequate response to this problem must be based on account of the practical foundations within the recipient's own experience for a changed consciousness.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part |40 pages

Lukács: reification and its overcoming

part |66 pages

The role of art in modern capitalism

chapter |19 pages

Benjamin

chapter |15 pages

Brecht

chapter |13 pages

Adorno

chapter |17 pages

Marcuse

part |30 pages

Althusserian Marxism and the Problem of Ideological Struggle

chapter |12 pages

Althusser on ideology

chapter |16 pages

Macherey and Eagleton

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion