Reflections on America von Claus Offe | Tocqueville, Weber and Adorno in the United States | ISBN 9780745694566

Reflections on America

Tocqueville, Weber and Adorno in the United States

von Claus Offe
Buchcover Reflections on America | Claus Offe | EAN 9780745694566 | ISBN 0-7456-9456-X | ISBN 978-0-7456-9456-6
Leseprobe

Reflections on America

Tocqueville, Weber and Adorno in the United States

von Claus Offe
At a time when so many cracks have emerged within the imaginedcommunity of 'the West', this important new book, by one ofthe leading social scientists in Europe, examines the intellectualhistory of comparing Europe and the United States. Claus Offeconsiders the perspectives adopted by three of Europe'sgreatest social scientists - Alexis de Tocqueville, Max Weberand Theodor W. Adorno - in their comparative writings onEurope.
While traveling, studying and working in the US, all threeconstantly looked back to their European origins, trying todecipher from their American experience what the future may holdfor Europe, be it for better or worse. Alexis de Tocqueville, theFrench aristocrat, observed the functioning of American democracywith a mix of admiration, envy and deep concerns about the fate ofliberty in the 'democratic age'. Max Weber, the Germansociologist, reported enthusiastically about the youthful energy hefound in the United States, which, however, he saw as graduallysuccumbing to the stifling tendencies of Europeanbureaucratization. Theodor W. Adorno, the critical theorist andrefugee from Nazi Germany, observed with a sense of despair theworkings of the American 'culture industry' which heequated to the totalitarian experience of Europe, only to switch toa much more favorable picture upon his return to Germany.
Europe and the US are conventionally assumed to share the sametrajectory and develop according to some common pattern of'occidental rationalism', with the observed differencesresulting from mere lags and relative advances on one side or theother. In this insightful book, Offe questions the relevance ofthis paradigm to transatlantic relations today.