A New Direction? The Religious Critique of Modern Culture

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2010 (152):7-30 (2010)
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Abstract

ExcerptI.During the 1960s, it seemed obvious to many on the American and European Left—including the founders of Telos in 1968—that a thoroughgoing cultural critique was badly needed, since the dominant forms of culture in the West appeared either to be promoting false consciousness or to have literally become false consciousness. More than this, by the twentieth century culture in general seemed to have reached the point where it was “mediating” practically everything. For many observers of the contemporary scene, it became increasingly difficult to grasp what was happening economically, politically, or socially without first understanding what was happening culturally

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References found in this work

The Religious Situation.Paul Tillich - 1934 - Philosophical Review 43:433.
Modernity, Liturgy and Reification: Remarks on the Liturgical Critique of Modernity.Paul Piccone - 1998 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1998 (113):11-18.

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