Lexington Books
Pages: 274
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-8976-4 • Hardback • December 2016 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-0-7391-8977-1 • eBook • December 2016 • $116.50 • (£90.00)
Lucy Jane Ward teaches in the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne.
Introduction: Agnes Heller with and Against Marx
Chapter One: The Theory of Need in Marx
Chapter Two: Agnes Heller: Marx as Problem and Promise
Chapter Three: Heller’s Anthropology of Affects and Feelings
Chapter Four: Everyday Life and Values
Chapter Five: A Theory of Modernity: Dissatisfaction and Critique
Chapter Six: A Theory of Rationality
Chapter Seven: Political Modernity and the Problem of Justice
Chapter Eight: The Good Life Beyond Duty
Conclusion: The Good Life and Human Wholeness
With Freedom and Dissatisfaction, Ward has put forth an in-depth synthesis of Heller's philosophy and has also laid the groundwork for intellectual historians interested in this segment of the Cold War period.
— Telos
This is an important book. Scholars of Agnes Heller’s work will find it exceptionally illuminating. Theorists who would utilize the succession of critical theory that runs from Marx through Lukács and the Budapest School will find in it a treatment of Heller’s distinctive critical theory previously unavailable in any literature. More urgently, this study is so important because as Ward identifies Heller’s array of interpretative tools, she also employs them in an argument which ends up placing Heller’s Marx on the developmental spectrum of modern liberalism . . . Ward is an adept guide into Heller’s thinking and forceful interlocutor for those who are already taken up with it. Her book is mandatory reading for anyone interested in Heller and in alternatives to the Frankfurt line of critical theory. It will prove valuable also for those concerned with how, as Marx intended, the ideological trappings of freedom might cease to stand against the free development of individual personalities and collaborative alliances.— Thesis Eleven