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A Sad Heart at the Barricades
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14107 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1988 |
2,674 Words |
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Wilfred M. McClay Wilfred M. McClay is an assistant professor of history at
Tulane University in New Orleans. |
THE LAST INTELLECTUALS
American Culture in the Age of Academe
Russell Jacoby
New York: Basic Books, 1987
290 pp., $18.95
During the 1970s, Russell Jacoby was perhaps the most vehement advocate in this country of the work (then obscure and largely untranslated) of the German neo-Marxist social thinker Theodor Adorno, one of the principal figures associated with the so-called Frankfurt School. Indeed, Jacoby's advocacy went so far, according to the historian Martin Jay, "that he emulated many of [Adorno's] stylistic mannerisms, [and] soon became his major defender against all attacks from the right or left." Adorno, of course, is best is best known for the exasperating opacity and difficulty of his prose, an expository strategy he quite consciously adopted as a means of baffling popularizers and middlebrows, and keeping them off his turf; "the advocates of communicability," he scolded, are "traitors to what they communicate." The appeal to "common sense" was a mere reinforcement of late-capitalist ideology, disguised as "reality." So firmly aloof and incurably snobbish a German mandarin would, despite the extremity of his views, seem an unlikely hero for a young American radical intellectual. But not the young Russell Jacoby. Jay's description of him in those days suggests how zealous was his embrace of the orphic Adorno: "intransigently insisting" on the revealed truths of Adorno's knotty texts, Jacoby "quickly became notorious for his sharply worded critiques of all attempts to make sense of the Frankfurt School's work in less glowing terms" than his
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