Are we truly disenchanted? Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

If youāve been watching the latest pitched battles in Americaās culture wars, youāve doubtless heard of the much-ballyhooed and much-denounced field of critical race theory. One thing you may not have gleaned from all the media furore, though, is that critical theory, from which critical race theory is derived, has much to offer. Jason Josephson-Stormās intriguing study, The Myth of Disenchantment, is a good place to start.
Critical theory was born in Germany between the two world wars. It was founded by a clique of Marxist academics in Frankfurt who were horrified that the grand march toward the communist utopia predicted by Marx wasnāt happening on schedule. On the one hand, communism in the Soviet Union had devolved into a totalitarian nightmare with a reliable habit of mass murder. On the other, the working people of one of the most educated and cultured nations of Europe, who according to Marxist theory should have been flocking to the banners of proletarian revolution, were instead rallying around a weird little man with a toothbrush moustache and an unhealthy obsession with an archaic, bloodthirsty mysticism of race and soil.
Obviously, something had gone wrong, not just with Marxism but with the entire enterprise of Western rationality summed up in the phrase āthe Enlightenmentā. Consider what that phrase means for a moment. One of the basic credos of the cultural mainstream in Western countries is the rather odd notion that, at a certain point not that many centuries ago, for the very first time in human history, intellectuals in Western Europe saw the universe as it actually is. Before then, despite fumbling attempts in the right direction by ancient Greek philosophers, humanity was hopelessly mired in superstitious ignorance; afterwards, Western intellectuals led a rapid ascent towards true knowledge of humanity and the universe. People still speak of that period using such far-from-neutral terms as āthe Age of Reasonā and āthe Enlightenmentā; in Germany, the term isĀ dieĀ AufklƤrung, literally āthe Clearing-Offā.
It is to the credit of the founders of critical theory ā Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Erich Fromm, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse ā that they didnāt just go on believing in the secular mythology of progress. They grasped that the Enlightenment had failed to accomplish what everyone expected of it, and they set out to understand what had gone wrong.Ā Since they were Marxists, of course, they still framed things in terms of the march toward a utopian society of the future, and critical theory thus set out not just to understand society but to change it.Ā It sought, in Horkheimerās words, āto liberate human beings from the circumstances that enslave themā ā but it tried to do that by understanding the entire panoply of reasons why those circumstances happen to exist at a given place and time.
This is what makes critical theory useful. Treat a belief as though itās timeless and context-free and all you can do is accept or reject it; recognise that every belief has a history and a cultural context and you can understand it instead. Critical theory attempts to do this with the core beliefs of Western society. The first major book to come out of the movement, Horkheimer and AdornoāsĀ Dialectic of Enlightenment, sought to make sense of the way that Enlightenment rationalism had led to the twin tyrannies of Stalin and Hitler. Itās still worth reading today, even though much of what passes for critical theory now is little more than empty propaganda.
In the opening lines of hisĀ Guide to Kulchur, Ezra Pound wrote:Ā āIn attacking a doctrine, a doxy, or a form of stupidity, it might be remembered that one isnāt of necessity attacking the man, or say āfounder,ā to whom the doctrine is attributed or on whom is it blamed.ā Similarly today, in circles unsympathetic to what critical theory has become, it is common to assail Adorno, Benjamin, et al., because of the current antics of their followers. This is unfair. The founders of critical theory did in fact make a massive mistake, but itās one that pretty much everyone made in those days and too many people still make today.
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