Anxiety, Modern Society, and the Critical Method interrogates the historical intersections of political economy, technology, and anxiety. By analyzing and building upon the tools developed by critical theorists to diagnose the symptoms of modern lifeâsuch as alienation, anomie, the Protestant ethic, and repressionâJoel Michael Crombez convincingly argues for a revitalization of critical social science to better confront the anxiety of life in modern societies.
With anxiety typically falling under the purview of psychology and its biomedical approach to treatment, here anxiety is demonstrated to have origins in the totalizing logics of modern society. As such, Crombez provides an interdisciplinary roadmap to diagnose and treat anxietyâwhich he calls critical socioanalysisâthat accounts for the psychosocial complexity of its production.
Joel Michael Crombez, Ph.D. (2018, University of Tennessee-Knoxville), is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Kennesaw State University. He works in critical, social, and psychoanalytic theory at the intersection of political economy, technology, and mental health. His most recent publication, an article with Steven Panageotou, âThe United States of Trump Corpâ (Fast Capitalism 17(1), 2020) theorizes the Trumpian model of governance.
Preface Acknowledgements List of Illustrations
Introduction
PARTÂ 1 From Traditional to Modern Society:Â The Critical Method of Early Modern Social Thought
âIntroduction to Part 1
1 Scenic Landscape 1
1âTraditional Life and the Totalizing Logic of Christianity
2âA Revolution in Space and of the Mind
3âEnlightenment and the Birth of Modernity
2 Critical Methods 1
1âFrom Philosophy to Social Theory:Â (Hegel, Feuerbach and) Marxâs Critical Method and the Totalizing Logic of Capital
2âThe Individual, the Social, and the Knot:Â Toward the Durkheimian Symptom of Anomie
3âTotalizing the Mind and Spirit:Â Weber and the Unholy Union of Religion and Capital
4âFrom Psychoanalysis to Socioanalysis:Â Anxiety, Repression, and Talk Therapy in Freud
Conclusion to Part 1
PART 2 Technology, Modern Wars, and the Rise of Consumer Culture:Â The Frankfurt School Revisits the Critical Method
Introduction to Part 2
3 Scenic Landscape 2
1âThe Totalizing Logic of Capital Comes of Age:Â The Path to Technological Embeddedness and Mass Society
2âThe Darker Side of Modernity:Â World War
4 Critical Methods 2
1âThe Psychosocial Origins of the Frankfurt School
2âFrom the Critical Method to Critical Theory and Negative Dialectics
3âA Lesson for Socioanalysis:Â Anxiety and the Social Vicissitudes of Technology and War in Mass Society
Conclusion to Part 2
PART 3 Anxiety-Dreams of Posthuman Futures:Â Sorting through the Discourses of 21st Century Life
Introduction to Part 3
5 Scenic Landscape 3
1âThe Postmodern Rupture in Modern Society
2âWe Are All Cyborgs Now:Â Life in the Mass
3âThe Coming Tide:Â Automation, Artificial Intelligence, and Space Colonization
6 Critical Methods 3
1âCritical Socioanalysis:Â Setting Up
2âDiscourses of the Psyche and the Self:Â A Lacanian Framework
3âThe Other Side of Socioanalysis:Â A Guide for Talk Therapy
Conclusion to Part 3
Conclusion
Bibliography Index
Sociologists, political economists, technologists, psychoanalysts, therapists, and anyone interested in critical theory, the link between psychosocial problems and modern society, and/or the diagnosis and treatment of anxiety.