SOCIAL CRITICISM

(Redirected from Social critic)
'Social criticism' analyzes (problematic) social structures and aims at practical solutions by specific measures, radical reform or even revolutionary change.

Contents
About
Academic forms of social criticism
Social criticism in literature and music
Classical works
Contemporary authors
References
Sources
See also
External links

About


The starting points of social criticism can be very different and the different forms of Socialism (Marxism, Anarchism, etc.) never had a monopoly on Social Criticism. The starting point can be the experience of a minority within society generally (e.g. gay people) or even the experience of a group of people ''within'' a progressive social movement which does not live up to its progressive agenda in every respect. Women in the New Left were often dissatisfied with the sexist attitudes of their male counterparts and many of them engaged in second wave feminism, women in the Chicano movement where enraged by similar attitudes and created Chicana feminism.
Within (or after ) postmodernism a grand unifying theory no longer seems possible. This does not exclude the possiblity nor the necessity of dialogue. Nevertheless most social critics still consider the Critique of capitalism to be central.

Academic forms of social criticism


The dispute between critical rationalism (e.g. Karl Popper and the Frankfurt School) exemplified the principal problem whether the research in the social sciences should pretend to be 'neutral' or 'objective' or consciously adapt a necessarily partisan view.
Works of social criticism can belong to social philosophy, political economy, sociology, social psychology , psychoanalysis but also cultural studies and other disciplines or reject academic forms of discourse.

Social criticism in literature and music


Social criticism can also be expressed in a fictional form, e.g. in a revolutionary novel like ''Under the iron heel'' by Jack London or in dystopian novels like Aldous Huxley's ''Brave New World'' (1932) or George Orwell's (''Nineteen Eighty-Four'') (1949) or Ray Bradburys ''Fahrenheit 451'' (1953), children's books or films.
Fictional literature can have a significant social impact. "For example, the 1852 novel ''Uncle Tom's Cabin'', by Harriet Beecher Stowe furthered the antislavery movement in the United States, and the 1885 novel ''Ramona'', by Helen Hunt Jackson, brought about changes in laws regarding Native Americans. Similarly, Upton Sinclair's 1906 novel ''The Jungle'' helped create new laws related to public health and food handling, and Arthur Morrison's 1896 novel ''A Child of the Jago'' caused England to change its housing laws." [1]
Musical expressions of social criticism are very frequent in punk music.

Classical works


Among the classical works are:

Étienne de La Boétie: ''Discourse on Voluntary Servitude'' (circa 1560)

Immanuel Kant: ''"On the question, what is enlightenment?"'' (1784)

Mary Wollstonecraft, ''A Vindication of the Rights of Woman'', (1792)

Karl Marx, The Communist Manifesto (1848)

★ Karl Marx: ''Capital'' (1867)

Mikhail Bakunin, ''Statism and Anarchy'' (1873)

Walter Benjamin: ''Critique of Violence'' (1921)

Georg Lukács: ''History and Class Consciousness'' (1923)

Virginia Woolf: ''A Room of One's Own'' (1929)

Sigmund Freud: ''Civilization and Its Discontents'' (1930)

Henry Miller: ''The Air-Conditioned Nightmare'' (1945)

Max Horkheimer/Theodor W. Adorno: ''Dialectic of Enlightenment'' (1947)

Simone de Beauvoir: The Second Sex (1949)

Aimé Césaire, ''Discourse on colonialism'' (1950)

Frantz Fanon: ''The Wretched of the Earth'' (1961)

Rachel Carson: ''Silent Spring'' (1962)

Herbert Marcuse: ''One-Dimensional Man'' (1964)

Guy Debord: ''The Society of the Spectacle'' (1967)

Harry Braverman: (1974)

Michel Foucault: ''Discipline and Punish'' (1975)

Cornelius Castoriadis: ''The Imaginary Institution of Society'' (1975)

Joseph Weizenbaum: ''Computer Power and Human Reason'' (1976)

Howard Zinn: ''A People's History of the United States'' (1980)
and many of the writings of Pierre Bourdieu

Contemporary authors



Judith Butler, ''Gender Trouble'' (1989)

Raewyn Connell, ''Masculinities'' (1995)

Noam Chomsky: ''Manufacturing Consent'' (1988), ''Profit over people'' (2000)

★ Simon Head: ''The New Ruthless Economy. Work and Power in the Digital Age'', Oxford UP 2005

Gilbert Rist, ''The History of Development: From Western Origins to Global Faith'', Expanded Edition, London: Zed Books, 2003

References



★ Patricia D. Netzley (1999), ''Social Protest Literature. An Encyclopedia of Works, Characters, Authors and Themes'', Santa Barbara, Denver, Oxford: ABC-Clio, 1999

Sources


1. Netzley 1999: xiii

See also



Ableism

African Cinema, African American literature

Adultism, Ageism, Children's rights movement

Antisemitism

class struggle, council communism, Labour movement, exploitation

Biopolitics

Critical pedagogy, Sociology of education

Critique of technology, Development criticism

Eurocentrism

Feminism, Women's movement, Women's studies,Women's Cinema

Ideology, Criticism of religion, Critique of capitalism, Critique of technology

Imperialism, Militarism, Nationalism

Hegemonic masculinity, Heterosexism, Homophobia

LGBT social movements

Anarchism, Surrealism, Situationist International

New social movements

Pamphlet, Satire, Utopian and dystopian fiction

Political Cinema, Political theatre

Post-structuralism, Critical Theory

Colonialism, Anticolonialism, Neocolonialism, Post-Colonialism

Racism, Racism in the United States, Antiracism

Sexism

Whiteness studies

External links



Znet

Gary Werskey - The Marxist Critique of Capitalist Science: A History in Three Movements?

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