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Marcuse, Herbert
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Marcuse, Herbert (1898–1979)

German-born US political philosopher. His theories combining Marxism and Freudianism influenced radical thought in the 1960s and 1970s. He preached the overthrow of the existing social order by using the system's very tolerance to ensure its defeat; he was not an advocate of violent revolution.

Marcuse was born in Berlin and became an influential member of the Frankfurt School. In 1934 he moved to the USA as a refugee from Hitler's Germany and taught philosophy at several universities, including Columbia 1934–40, Brandeis 1954–65, and the University of California at San Diego 1965–79. He wrote several books, including Eros and Civilization (1955) and One-Dimensional Man (1964).



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Today, the world watches Christendom crumble from the lethal effects of unopposed cultural Marxism--the ultimate goal of Marxist theorists Georg Lukacs and Antonio Gramsci set in 1919 and advanced by New Left guru Herbert Marcuse in the 1960s.
Wright Mills, the Frankfurt School, and Herbert Marcuse provided significant intellectual inspiration and solidarity for the U.
The inclusion of Ever Is Over All, 1997, also a two-channel projection juxtaposing visually clear narrative--a dreamlike vision of joyous and elegant vandalism--with more indistinct and lyrical nonnarrative imagery, showed just how far Rist has developed technically even as her extravagant, funny, poetic, and rather hippie-ish vision of what Herbert Marcuse once called "liberation from the affluent society" has remained admirably consistent.
 
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