Influence of Marx and Freud at Herbert Marcuse

Main Article Content

Luis Solórzano

Abstract

Herbert Marcuse was born in Berlin in 1898. He was educated at the Universities of Berlin and Freiburg, emigrated in 1933 to the U.S. where he developed an intense teaching activity at Columbia, Harvard, Brandeis and San Diego Universities. His work was hugely broadcast and influenced the "hippie" movement and the student revolts of the 1960s. He died in 1981. Main works: Reason and Revolution, (1941); Eros and Civilization (1953); Soviet Marxism (1958) and The One-Dimensional Man (1965).
His work, an attempt at synthesis between marx and Freud's ideas, can be seen as a vast protest against the emphasis placed on authoritarianism and productivity in modern capitalist and communist societies. He considered that the technical development of the modern world allowed the passage to non-competitive societies in which human beings could develop with more freedom and satisfaction.
Next, we'll examine these ideals based on your book "Eros and Civilization."


 

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How to Cite
SolórzanoL. (2021). Influence of Marx and Freud at Herbert Marcuse. Acta Académica, 4(Mayo), 63-66. Retrieved from http://revista.uaca.ac.cr/index.php/actas/article/view/1036
Section
Foro Latinoamericano

References

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