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Together again for the first time, Marx and Durkheim join forces in the pages of Disintegration: Bad Love, Collective Suicide, and the Idols of Imperial Twilight for a dialectical exploration of the moral economy of neoliberalism, animated, as it is not only by the capitalist chase for surplus value, but also by an immortal vortex of sacred powers. Classical sociology and psychoanalysis are reconstituted within Hegelian social ontology and dialectical method that differentiates between the ephemeral and free and the eternal and fixed aspects of modern life.
Mark Worrell, Ph.D. (2003), University of Kansas, is an Associate Editor at Critical Sociology and has published articles in a wide variety of critical social theory journals and has authored or edited numerous books.
PrefaceAcknowledgementsList of FiguresAbbreviationsIntroduction1 Marxheimianism and the Return of the Repressed2 Freedom and Anomie3 Dynamism, Alienation and Reification4 Masters and Slaves5 Authoritarianism, Character, and Resonance6 Disobedience and Necessity1 Reflective Determinations1 The Lifeless Universal2 The Judgement3 The Syllogism4 Telos5 The Idea6 Necessity Versus Necessity7 The Commodity8 The Dialectic2 Bad Love1 The House of the Absolute2 The New Economy and the Reign of Tyche3 The Nightmare of Collective Unconsciousness4 Suicide3The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse1 Egoism2 Altruism3 Anomie4 Fatalism5 Composite Forces6 Positive Hell and Heavenly NegativitiesBibliographyIndex