Globalizing Critical Theory. Edited by Max Pensky. Lanham,
MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2005. 264p. $82.50 cloth, $29.95
paper.
This is a welcome and innovative book, at least in its basic intent.
The innovation resides mainly in the correlation between a prominent
strand in Western social and political thought—the Frankfurt School
program of “critical theory”—and a major phenomenon of
contemporary political life: the process of globalization. In many ways,
this correlation goes against the dominant academic grain. At least as
cultivated in American academia, political theory tends to be mainly
retrospective and concerned with the rehearsal of time-honored texts,
often with a pronounced slant against contaminating theorizing with
mundane affairs. On the other hand, examination of current
developments—including the process of globalization—tends to
be left to journalists or else to specialists in international politics
with little or no background in traditions of political thought. In this
respect, the present volume is a breakthrough. It deliberately seeks to
bring the insights of the Frankfurt School program to bear on ongoing
discussions about global politics, economics, science, and aesthetics. All
the contributors, including the editor, are distinguished scholars with
solid reputations grounded in the traditions of critical theory and
adjacent theoretical paradigms.