Sean Noah Walsh's Counterrevolution and Repression in the Politics of Education is a significant work that not only casts light on the academy as a significant driver of reification, but that also promises to help reanimate critical theory through a fresh deployment of Marcuse's works. By posing the grossly under utilized and still troubling Marcuse at a critical site of learning and communication, Walsh speaks to important questions of education, praxis and citizenship relevant not only to political theorists, but to all those within the academy seeking to challenge and improve it.