A.R.L. Gurland, the Frankfurt School, and the Critical Theory of Antisemitism

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2008 (144):129-147 (2008)
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Abstract

“Just for the record, however: I don't hate Communists.” So wrote Arcadius Rudolph Lang Gurland to his longtime friend, colleague, and collaborator Otto Kirchheimer in 1958.1 Behind this straightforward statement lay over thirty years of Gurland's experience as a passionate scholar, spokesperson, and advocate of that most dialectical of the many forms of socialist politics, revolutionary social democracy. Throughout his peripatetic life of near-constant exile in Russia, Germany, France, and the United States as student, journalist, theoretician, researcher, writer, teacher, and translator in the service of political organizations, newspapers, research institutions, universities, governments, publishers, and his own political and scholarly..

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State Capitalism.Frederick Pollock - 1941 - Studies in Philosophy and Social Science 9:200.

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