This is a nice collection of essays, many focusing on previously overlooked or understudied aspects of the work of thinkers associated with the Frankfurt School. To take one example, Jay's treatment of Walter Benjamin’s philately does not lead to general thoughts on the act of collecting as is often the case, but is rather a meditation on stamp-collecting in particular. In this essay, and many others, Jay weaves personal reflections into the theoretical. We read about the role stamp collecting played in his youth and how Benjamin’s thought can give philosophical significance to what may otherwise be considered a simple childish preoccupation.
In other essays it becomes clear that Jay's life has crossed over with those of his subjects in other more concrete ways, and relations between them have not always been complimentary. He alludes to an unflattering reference to himself in a letter from Adorno to Horkheimer. This hostility can perhaps be explained by the role he occupied as a young graduate student, writing the first general history of the Frankfurt School in English and hence having a discernible influence on the reception of their work. Indeed, this is a theme that recurs throughout the essays. Many of the essays originated in conferences and symposiums prompted by precisely this problem of legacy. In addition, Jay finds himself in the unenviable position of facing down the spectre of ‘cultural Marxism’, an antisemitic conspiracy theory intent on misrepresenting the thought and influence of a group of mostly Jewish German refugees, and which has seeped its way into contemporary political discourse.
As with many such conspiracies, the Frankfurt School conspiracy theory is intent on reducing its subjects to ciphers, entirely characterless yet all-poweful, driven by a relentless impulse to crush the West. In reading this volume, however, the humanity of this group of intellectuals is abundantly clear, for better or worse. Indeed, Jay has said that his understandable decision to leave out such nuances and personal idiosyncrasies in his The Dialectical Imagination may have had the unintended effect of granting the book a limited usefulness in the hands of right-wing zealots. An imagined homegeneity is key to the conspiracy they have constructed. To the contrary, Frankfurt School theoreticians were as susceptible as anyone to heated disagreement and even self-contradiction.
The circumstances of the lives of these thinkers led to various shifts in viewpoint, in some cases a gradual tempering of a youthful radicalism, in others tactical concessions to pragmatic considerations. Indeed, critical theory was more open to change than the more dogmatic readings of Freud and Marx that they rejected. As Jay makes clear, the Frankfurt School looked not to an imagined past to be restored in order to justify their intellectual project. The power of critical theory persists in its ability to combine the apparently disparate in its constant search for openings for the free individual, that which escapes administration and through which visions of utopia can be glimpsed.