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  1. Norbert Elias and Franz Borkenau.Arpád Szakolczai - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (2):45-69.
    This article argues that the life-works of Norbert Elias and Franz Borkenau can best be understood together, as they were developed in close interaction during the 1930s. Deriving inspiration from Freud, they took up the project formulated by Weber at the end of his `Anticritical Last Word'. However, in two significant respects they went beyond the Weberian problematics. First, overcoming the centrality attributed to economic concerns, they rooted the Western civilizing process in the long-term attempt to harness the violence that (...)
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  • From Philosophy to Sociology: Elias and the Neo-Kantians.Richard Kilminster & Cas Wouters - 1995 - Theory, Culture and Society 12 (3):81-120.
  • La sociologie de la connaissance comme socio-pathologie. Une lecture psychanalytique d’Idéologie et utopie.Gabor Tverdota - 2014 - Meta: Research in Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy 6 (1):98-150.
    This paper proposes a psychoanalytical interpretation of Karl Mannheim’s main work, Ideology and Utopia. Our hypothesis is that a kind of “socio-pathology” that is implicit in Mannheim’s sociology of knowledge can be put explicit by the interpretation of his conception of false consciousness as a synthesis of the eponym concept of Georg Lukács and of the Freudian notion of illusion. We than show that the often pointed aporetic character of Mannheim’s sociology of knowledge can be outrun if its key element, (...)
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