ABSTRACT

In "The Frankfurt School on Religion," Eduardo Mendieta has brought together a collection of readings and essays revealing both the deep connections that the Frankfurt School has always maintained with religion as well as the significant contribution that its work has to offer. Rather than being unanimously antagonistic towards religion as has been the received wisdom, this collection shows the great diversity of responses that individual thinkers of the school developed and the seriousness and sophistication with which they engaged the core religious issues and major religious traditions.
Through a careful selection of writings from eleven prominent theorists, including several new and previously untranslated pieces from Leo Lowenthal, Max Horkheimer, Herbert Marcuse, and Jurgen Habermas, this volume provides much needed sources for religious leaders, philosophers, and social theorists as they grapple with the nature and functions of religion in the contemporary social, political, and economic landscape.
"The Frankfurt School on Religion" recovers the religious dimensions of the Frankfurt School, for too long sidelined or ignored, and offers new perspectives and insights necessary to the development of a fuller and more nuanced critical theory of society.
Selections and essays from: Ernst Bloch, Erich Fromm, Leo Lowenthal, Herbert Marcuse, Theodor W. Adorno, Max Horkheimer, Walter Benjamin, Johann Baptist Metz, Jurgen Habermas, Helmut Peukert, Edmund Arens.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction: Religion as Critique:

part I|2 pages

Ernst Bloch

part II|2 pages

Erich Fromm

chapter 5|38 pages

The Dogma of Christ

part III|2 pages

Leo Löwenthal

part IV|2 pages

Herbert Marcuse

chapter 7|32 pages

A Study on Authority: Luther, Calvin, Kant

part V|2 pages

Theodor W. Adorno

chapter 8|18 pages

Reason and Sacrifice

chapter 9|8 pages

Reason and Revelation

chapter 10|36 pages

Meditations on Metaphysics

part VI|2 pages

Max Horkheimer

chapter 11|12 pages

Theism and Atheism

chapter 12|18 pages

The Jews and Europe

chapter 13|8 pages

Religion and Philosophy

part VII|2 pages

Walter Benjamin

chapter 15|4 pages

Capitalism as Religion

part 16|2 pages

Theological-Political Fragment

chapter 17|10 pages

Theses on the Philosophy of History

part VIII|2 pages

Johann Baptist Metz

chapter 18|8 pages

Productive Noncontemporaneity

part IX|2 pages

Jürgen Habermas

part X|2 pages

Helmut Peukert

part XI|2 pages

Edmund Arens