<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: Horrible writer, horrible thinker, horrible book Review: I actually am going to assign this book. It is an excellent extended example of the logical fallacy called "begging the question": Mr. Eagleton makes an attempt to discuss ideology in a way that does not acknowledge the implicit ideological structure of his own theory of ideology. Sort of like a postmodernist who claimed all was relative, Mr. Eagleton's thesis is a blatantly ideological marxian class analysis applied to abstract structures of ideology. In doing this, and in asking the reader to believe this account is anything but a reformulation of the Marxian position on power is an amazing lie. The premise is simple and completely unoriginal, and Mr. Eagleton's text has been thoroughly 'Veblenized' (meaning made purposely obfuscatory so as to disguise bad premises, or, bad writing done for effect). Mr. Eagleton immediately divides the world up into the neuvo-simplified Marxian categories of the rulers and the ruled, and he gets no further than that. It's all a big socio-economic system conspiracy, you see: ideology is not philosophy applied to politics or abstractions, they are reduced to being simply tools of power. While in an incredibly limited sense this is true, for the most part it is not, and people hardly understand the roots of their own ideological leanings. The Himalayan extremity of Eagleton's prose was done on purpose. It is done so at the end reading the only thing one can think to say of the book is to repeat the simple premises one has been given by it. Eagleton wants you to believe in his ideological notion that the world is divided up into his Marxian class system, and wants (like all marxianss except maybe Jon Elster) to have the reader believe (in as inexact a way as can possibly be mustered) that only a radical break from the common structures of ideology is the only way to break from underneath this class war being waged against you. In other words, you have to become a commie rat to stop being taken in by the ruling class. In other words, you have to adopt his ideology to rise above ideology....
Rating:  Summary: Decent Introduction Review: The subtitle to this book reads 'an introduction', but I doubt that your typical undergraduate student would find this a useful introductory text. Rather being a bland, dispassionate catalogue of various views on ideology, Eagleton's book is a lively and even at time virulent debate with the long line of intellectuals who have sought to conceptualize ideology from the likes of Marx, Schopenhauer, Lukács, Althusser, etc. At its core, the enterprise contained with the books stands as a defense of the Marxist critical tradition against post-modernism and relativism-meaning that he desires to preserve the notion of ideology as a critical device for emancipation from false beliefs and mental processes that reinforce social oppression. Thus, after its initial chapters covering the usage of the term 'ideology' in speech and the social manifestations of ideological strategies, the Marxist debates take the forefront of the discussion almost entirely. In the final pages, Eagleton attempts to rebuff post-modern and neo-Marxist erosions of the viability of the concept of ideology. If you never considered Marxism to be the school of thought with the most invested interest in preserving the notion of 'ideology', a reading of this book will suggest strongly to the contrary. Eagleton has not only an incredible talent for not only conveying his argument in a lucid, witty and convincing manner, but also in presenting the position of diverse authors with whom he interacts. He thus proves himself not only to be an excellent mind and author but also a superb reader.
Rating:  Summary: Illuminating on ideology & its intellectual history Review: The subtitle to this book reads 'an introduction', but I doubt that your typical undergraduate student would find this a useful introductory text. Rather being a bland, dispassionate catalogue of various views on ideology, Eagleton's book is a lively and even at time virulent debate with the long line of intellectuals who have sought to conceptualize ideology from the likes of Marx, Schopenhauer, Lukács, Althusser, etc. At its core, the enterprise contained with the books stands as a defense of the Marxist critical tradition against post-modernism and relativism-meaning that he desires to preserve the notion of ideology as a critical device for emancipation from false beliefs and mental processes that reinforce social oppression. Thus, after its initial chapters covering the usage of the term 'ideology' in speech and the social manifestations of ideological strategies, the Marxist debates take the forefront of the discussion almost entirely. In the final pages, Eagleton attempts to rebuff post-modern and neo-Marxist erosions of the viability of the concept of ideology. If you never considered Marxism to be the school of thought with the most invested interest in preserving the notion of 'ideology', a reading of this book will suggest strongly to the contrary. Eagleton has not only an incredible talent for not only conveying his argument in a lucid, witty and convincing manner, but also in presenting the position of diverse authors with whom he interacts. He thus proves himself not only to be an excellent mind and author but also a superb reader.
Rating:  Summary: The winter of reviewer's discontent Review: There are several sentences in my friend's asnalysis of the eminant mister Eagleton's critic (myself) which catch the eye somehow. "Arguably, he's not Marxist enough in critiquing these positions" This sentence alone tells us all we will ever need to know about the biases of the reviewer. Actually, it is nothing of the sort, and the eminent and dignified mister Eagleton was nothing short of baldly dogmatic in in every page of his book. The next sentence is a reader-stopper, a sort of Gog and Magog of being completely incorrect: "In using phrases like "abstract structures of ideology" the reviewer shows he has not really read the book attentively, as ideology is not necessarily "abstract" at all" Actually, that's all ideology is by its very definition- an abstraction, an idea about how the universe works. The Mirriam Webster dictionary clearly defines the word "ideology" in direct and complete contradiction to my reviewer friend: "Ideology: Function: noun 1 : visionary theorizing 2 a : a systematic body of concepts especially about human life or culture b : a manner or the content of thinking characteristic of an individual, group, or culture c : the integrated assertions, theories and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program." Not content with with opening his mouth and removing all doubt, our friend goes on to embarrass himself further: "And, incidentally, by what definition of "ideology" is Marxism an ideology??" I thought the multiple question marks were a nice emphasis of the intelligence of this statement. Well my illustrious friend, Marxism is an ideology in the same sense that it is a sociopolitical idea, a theory. Also, Marx made mention of it as a theory maybe fifteen or twenty thousand times in his writing, and that is what it is called by every marxian scholar alive and dead. Theories are ideas. Ideas are by their very nature abstractions. Even high school children in the UK know this.
Rating:  Summary: The winter of reviewer's discontent Review: There are several sentences in my friend's asnalysis of the eminant mister Eagleton's critic (myself) which catch the eye somehow. "Arguably, he's not Marxist enough in critiquing these positions" This sentence alone tells us all we will ever need to know about the biases of the reviewer. Actually, it is nothing of the sort, and the eminent and dignified mister Eagleton was nothing short of baldly dogmatic in in every page of his book. The next sentence is a reader-stopper, a sort of Gog and Magog of being completely incorrect: "In using phrases like "abstract structures of ideology" the reviewer shows he has not really read the book attentively, as ideology is not necessarily "abstract" at all" Actually, that's all ideology is by its very definition- an abstraction, an idea about how the universe works. The Mirriam Webster dictionary clearly defines the word "ideology" in direct and complete contradiction to my reviewer friend: "Ideology: Function: noun 1 : visionary theorizing 2 a : a systematic body of concepts especially about human life or culture b : a manner or the content of thinking characteristic of an individual, group, or culture c : the integrated assertions, theories and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program." Not content with with opening his mouth and removing all doubt, our friend goes on to embarrass himself further: "And, incidentally, by what definition of "ideology" is Marxism an ideology??" I thought the multiple question marks were a nice emphasis of the intelligence of this statement. Well my illustrious friend, Marxism is an ideology in the same sense that it is a sociopolitical idea, a theory. Also, Marx made mention of it as a theory maybe fifteen or twenty thousand times in his writing, and that is what it is called by every marxian scholar alive and dead. Theories are ideas. Ideas are by their very nature abstractions. Even high school children in the UK know this.
Rating:  Summary: Decent Introduction Review: This is a decent introduction to ideology, and how our understanding of it has changed since the formalization of its study in the Enlightenment. Unfortunately, Eagleton's attitude towards the "postmodernist" or "post-structuralist" thinkers who are his so-rarely named enemies (except for the poor Michel Foucualt) frequently reduces their arguments to straw men, and then simplistically and reductively refutes them. He expresses no interest in exploring the possibilities of Foucault's work, or of engaging in any significant manner with Lyotard or Baudrillard. To say Baudrillard's politics are vacuous is in one sense true and in another sense misses the point. Furthermore, some of his readings (for example, of Nietzsche) are similarly reductive and ignore everything that does not explicitly address the subject of ideology, much to the detriment of his argument. The book's simple stylistic manner makes it easy and quick to read but perhaps impairs its philosophy. Eagleton, as the back of my copy announces, is a "splendid polemicist," and this book reinforces that distinction, while leaving open the question of whether or not one wants to be considered a "polemicist."
Rating:  Summary: Slugs it out with difficult material Review: This is a difficult, but rewarding book for readers interested in the concept of ideology in a postmodern environment. Essentially, ideology means false societal beliefs that become institutionalized so they can serve the interests of a ruling class. Ideological beliefs are like propaganda, but differ in being much more deeply embedded in how a person thinks about the society he or she lives in. Thus, for those of us who are Americans, we all tend to have certain beliefs about the nature of the democracy we live in. Beliefs that structure the way we act, like being duty-bound to go to the polls to elect our leaders. Critics, on the other hand, might point out how these beliefs actually work against most people and for the hidden interests of those elites who really hold power in America. If the critic is right, then those beliefs would be ideological ones and represent a "false consciousness" about democracy-in-America's true nature. There is a conceptual issue that arises with the notion of ideology. It implies at its heart that there are objective truths in the world that do not depend on our idea of them in order for them to be true. On a more extreme view, it can mean there are absolute truths that cannot be relativized to any person, group, or time period. The natural sciences were long held as our only reliable source of these objective truths. Thus, the early supporters of the idea of ideology believed that by using scientific methods, the false beliefs of ideology could be unmasked or exposed. However, since the time of the early Greeks there have been thinkers who challenged the idea of objective truth. Truth, these skeptics argue, is in the eye of the beholder. Thus science, for one, discloses no inner truths about the world; it only aids us in remaking things in ways that satisfy the needs of the more powerful among us. The issue that non-skeptics like Eagleton must confront is that without a clear concept of objective truth, the whole idea of ideology seems impossible. The problem for our historical period is that the climate is dominated by a skepticism toward objective truths, making the concept of ideology very unfashionable. Eagleton would like to rescue false consciousness from the current version of skepticism (postmodernism), which is what the book is mainly about. He examines the various positions that both defenders of the concept (Marx, Lukasz, Althusser) and its critics (Nietzsche, Rorty, Derrida), among others, have taken over the years. So far as I can tell, Eagleton presents no new theory of his own. Instead he uses some forceful examples to illustrate the underlying practical value the idea of false consciousness has for us all. Certainly some background in philosophy is needed to navigate these difficult routes. But if you agree that many of our most embedded and structured beliefs serve the interests of others instead of ourselves, and that we do not come by these beliefs accidentally, then you too have an interest in ideology.
<< 1 >>
|