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Journal Article
New German Critique (2017) 44 (3 (132)): 39–60.
Published: 01 November 2017
... , March 28 . www.signandsight.com/features/2234.html . (Mis)reading the Market? The Publishing Business and Theory Transfer Joe Paul Kroll At what point might theory transfer from a foreign language be said to begin...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2008) 35 (1 (103)): 51–64.
Published: 01 February 2008
...Jakob Tanner New German Critique, Inc. 2008 The Conspiracy of the Invisible Hand: Anonymous Market Mechanisms and Dark Powers Jakob Tanner The Popularity of Conspiracies Conspiracy theories are both simple and highly sophisticated...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2017) 44 (2 (131)): 41–73.
Published: 01 August 2017
... both expressionist artists who struck a noncommercial pose and cultural reformers who argued for a synthesis of art and industry. © 2017 by New German Critique, Inc. 2017 Tristan Tzara Richard Huelsenbeck Raoul Hausmann marketing publicity References Anonymous . 1919...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (3 (120)): 171–191.
Published: 01 November 2013
...Randall Halle Unleashed by the markets that led to the Great Recession, processes of gentrification rapidly transform major German cities. The experiences of urban transformation have found critical expression in documentary and feature film. This article reviews the cultural history...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2020) 47 (3 (141)): 45–57.
Published: 01 November 2020
... slipping benchmarks and declining quality, the fragmentation of the filmgoing public into niche markets, and above all the anxiety about the authority of the critic to definitively speak for and interpret culture to a receptive audience have animated international film criticism since its origins...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2020) 47 (3 (141)): 59–71.
Published: 01 November 2020
... spaces to win back film criticism as a counterbalance to market-driven film policies? Copyright © 2020 by New German Critique, Inc. 2020 activist film criticism writing on film in Germany crisis on traditional film criticism future prospects of film criticism Film criticism finds itself...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2011) 38 (2 (113)): 159–196.
Published: 01 August 2011
... and ideas equally. The strongest critique of the Humboldt model came from the liberal camp (Dahrendorf) that wanted to modernize the German university by emphasizing the needs of the labor market. Parallels to the more recent American corporate university are briefly discussed at the end. © 2011 by New...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2012) 39 (2 (116)): 11–24.
Published: 01 August 2012
.... Once privileged as metaphors for production, Bauhaus designs are now examined to expose the school's participation in a market economy and its interaction with consumerism. This in turn has focused attention on the school's many female students and the much smaller number of female staff. Finally...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (1 (118)): 1–27.
Published: 01 February 2013
... the brother- sister relation,4 I take Hegel to have hit on a truth that is important for under- standing women in the context of the emerging market economy of Hegel’s day. The ethical equality in the brother-sister relation (evident in Hegel’s rela- tion to his sister, Christiane) is symbolized...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2018) 45 (3 (135)): 1–38.
Published: 01 November 2018
.... The third stage of the change in city planning, analyzed here, marks a turn to collective and corporate city planning. In particular, this section analyzes how a critique of abstract social relations gathered together criticisms of prewar housing conditions, speculation, the market, and ornamentation...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2007) 34 (1 (100)): 189–207.
Published: 01 February 2007
... of economics (fi nancial markets, trade, transnational corporations), information technology (televi- sion, computers, the Internet), and politics (civil society, the waning of the nation-state, the rise of nongovernmental organizations). The cultural dimen- sions of globalization and their relation...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2013) 40 (1 (118)): 65–92.
Published: 01 February 2013
..., the calculable and the quantifiable—including, most sadly, the idea of modernity itself. Such a total market culture is what we usually call late capitalism today. If a total market culture was a key problem for Adorno, then the obsolete and the outmoded were a solution of sorts. In the language...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2010) 37 (2 (110)): 31–47.
Published: 01 August 2010
... in 1946 to investigate the morale and the morals of the GIs stationed there. On her arrival Frost delivers a birthday cake to Iowa resident Captain John Pringle (John Lund) from his girlfriend, Dusty. The captain is involved in the black market and is also having an affair with an ex-Nazi...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2012) 39 (2 (116)): 1–9.
Published: 01 August 2012
... does not automatically translate into a cogent critique of capitalism, but social unease about the disastrous effects of a seemingly unbridled market economy that has turned politicians into mere executioners of a higher economic necessity without alternatives is growing. Ingo Schulze...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2019) 46 (2 (137)): 1–25.
Published: 01 August 2019
... systems such as art, politics, or the academic system is tied to a profile, or, in marketing terms, a “brand.” No one expects the product of a brand to express any “authentic” essence—but everyone expects it to be profilic. It must provide an identity on the basis of public recognition and validation...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2015) 42 (3 (126)): 1–7.
Published: 01 November 2015
... Church in the western regions of Germany—and the CDU-led establishment of a so-called social market economy after World War II. It was no coinci- dence, Chappel claims, that CDU leaders hailed the robust performance of their country’s economy (from 1950 to 1954 a growth rate of 8.2 percent...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2015) 42 (3 (126)): 9–40.
Published: 01 November 2015
... Soziallehre—protes- tantische Sozialethik, ed. Helga Grebing (Munich: Olzog, 1969), 446. 25. Quoted in A. J. Nicholls, Freedom with Responsibility: The Social Market Economy in Ger- many, 1919–1963 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 21. 26. Rodgers, Atlantic Crossings, chap. 3...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2018) 45 (1 (133)): 1–22.
Published: 01 February 2018
... as the bourgeoisie took control of Europe. Since then, capitalism has built its vast cityscapes on the shaky foundations of chance. Expert gamblers cluster in ™nancial districts, betting on stock prices, trading on the futures market, converting risk into reward. They are the “legit- imate” gamblers...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2015) 42 (3 (126)): 145–168.
Published: 01 November 2015
... concept of connecting the market with social welfare could become a guiding principle in the interwar period. The search for a “third path” (dritten Weg) that would mitigate the social effects of the capitalist economy left its mark on an entire generation of intellectuals who affiliated...
Journal Article
New German Critique (2017) 44 (3 (132)): 5–20.
Published: 01 November 2017
... framework to address questions such as the following:8 How did the transfor- mation of the book market since the 1950s affect the production of theory? How was the emergence of theory connected to the crisis and subsequent growth of many humanities since the 1960s that led to an ongoing interroga...