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  1. In the spring of 1793, the war entered a third phase, marked by new French defeats. Austria, Prussia, and Great Britain formed a coalition (later called the First Coalition), to which most of the rulers of Europe adhered. France lost Belgium and the Rhineland, and invading forces threatened Paris.

  2. Marcuse's new book, Counter-Revolution and Revolt, attempts to articulate the subjective and objective factors leading to the re-emergence of radical politics in advanced capitalist society. Following the trend of An Essay on Liberation this book indicates a movement of critical theory away from a purely ideological critique of capitalism (expressed, for instance, in One-Dimensional Man) in ...

  3. Finally, Counterrevolution and Revolt may satisfy few readers, but should challenge many to raise new questions—which is, after all, a central function of critical theory.—D. F. D. Cite Plain text BibTeX Formatted text Zotero EndNote Reference Manager RefWorks

  4. COUNTERREVOLUTION AND REVOLT Western world, altogether preventive. Here, there is no recent revolution to be undone, and there is none in the offing. And yet, fear of revolution which creates the common interest links the various stages and forms of the counterrevolution. It runs. the whole gamut from parliamentary democracy via the police

  5. 1 de jan. de 1972 · Not soon after it begins, "Counterrevolution And Revolt" demonstrates how the New Left, particularly in the US, was already beginning a sort of rear-guard action, in part due to the movement's fragmentation into sometimes-warring camps, and to the incapacity of what Marcuse defines as "the radical refusal" to do much of anything other than to avoid the consumer culture against which it was ...

    • Hardcover
    • Herbert Marcuse
  6. Not soon after it begins, "Counterrevolution And Revolt" demonstrates how the New Left, particularly in the US, was already beginning a sort of rear-guard action, in part due to the movement's fragmentation into sometimes-warring camps, and to the incapacity of what Marcuse defines as "the radical refusal" to do much of anything other than to avoid the consumer culture against which it was ...

    • HERBERT MARCUSE
  7. Counterrevolution and Revolt @article{Shriver1973CounterrevolutionAR, title={Counterrevolution and Revolt}, author={Donald W. Shriver and Herbert Marcuse} ...