The Frankfurt
School of German Social Theory has exerted a considerable influence over the
sociology of the last two generations. Originally a centre for the study of
Marxist theory brought into being in the first years of Weimar Republic
Germany, the work of its principal figures has nonetheless always had a
somewhat ambiguous relationship with mainstream Western Marxism, right through
from the early writings of Max
Horkheimer in the 1930s to the very recent work of Jürgen Habermas.
However, the development of a distinct ‘critical theory’ of society by Horkheimer and Adorno and its reworking
by later Frankfurt theorists constituted a (sometimes tenuous) thread of ideas
and concepts which gave the Frankfurt School an important role in the expansion
of modern sociology. Despite the
somewhat paradoxical rejection of Marxist concepts by many Frankfurt School
writers, it was especially instrumental in the renaissance of Marxist sociology
which took hold in the late 1960s.
As Tom Bottomore makes clear in drawing this parallel,
the Frankfurt School thinkers were led by their pessimism into a retreat from
Marxian social theory, and then towards an essentially philosophical and
neo-Hegelian critique of ideology. Perhaps best seen as ‘radicals in despair’, Horkheimer, Marcuse and Adorno were
responsible for a theory of capitalist society which emphasized its cultural
manifestations above all other aspects. Caught in a climate of cultural loss
and decline which must be linked to their experience of the rise of Fascism in
Germany, the ‘critical theory’ developed by these men during this period was
overwhelmingly concerned with the mounting irrationality of social and cultural
values, and their reflection in the ideas of positivism and ‘scientism’.
Herbert Marcuse’s
version of ‘critical theory’
shares many of these aspects of Ideologiekritik conducted not from empirical
observation but philosophical speculation. His One-Dimensional Man (certainly
his best known work) thus remains firmly within the contemplative cast of
Frankfurt School work, its nature as a philosophical critique of advanced
capitalism perhaps explaining why its great popularity did not lead to any
significant attempts at extension or empirical demonstration of the thesis
which it contains.
The Frankfurt
School is a complex phenomenon, and the style of social thought which has come to be
principally associated with it—‘critical theory’—has been expounded and
interpreted in a variety of ways. The institutional basis upon which the school
developed was the Institute of Social Research, officially established on 3
February 1923 by a decree of the Ministry of Education, and affiliated with the
University of Frankfurt.
The founding of
the Institute took place in
the particular conditions produced by the victory of the Bolshevik revolution
in Russia and the defeat of the Central European revolutions, notably that in
Germany; and it can be seen as one response to the need felt by left wing
intellectuals to reappraise Marxist theory, and especially the relation between
theory and practice, in the new circumstances.