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The Frankfurt School and the authoritarian personality: Balance sheet of an Insight

journal contribution
posted on 2021-04-01, 00:00 authored by Geoff BoucherGeoff Boucher
Frankfurt School Critical Theory is perhaps the most significant theory of society to have developed directly from a research programme focused on the critique of political authoritarianism, as it manifested during the interwar decades of the twentieth century. The Frankfurt School’s analysis of the persistent roots—and therefore the perennial nature—of what it describes as the ‘authoritarian personality,’ remains influential in the analysis of authoritarian populism in the contemporary world, as evidenced by several recent studies. Yet the tendency in these studies is to reference the final formulation of the category, as expressed in Theodor Adorno and cothinkers’ The Authoritarian Personality (1950), as if this were a theoretical readymade that can be unproblematically inserted into a measured assessment of the threat to democracy posed by current authoritarian trends. It is high time that the theoretical commitments and political stakes in the category of the authoritarian personality are re-evaluated, in light of the evolution of the Frankfurt School. In this paper, I review the classical theories of the authoritarian personality, arguing that two quite different versions of the theory—one characterological, the other psychodynamic—can be extracted from Frankfurt School research.

History

Journal

Thesis eleven: critical theory and historical sociology

Volume

163

Issue

1

Pagination

89 - 102

Publisher

Sage

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0725-5136

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2021, The Author

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