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The term "ideology" can cover almost any set of ideas, but its power to bewitch political activists results from its strange logic: that the modern Western world is actually the most oppressive system of despotism the world has ever seen. This work takes this complex construction apart, analyzing its logical, rhetorical, and psychological devices.
List of contents
Foreword to the Second Edition
Martyn P. Thompson
Preface to the Second Edition
Introduction to the Second Edition
Preface to the First Edition
1 Introduction to the 1st edition
2 Identification
I. A Science of Social Conditions
II. Society as a System of Consequences
III. The Secret of the Human World
IV. Modernity as Status Quo
V. Some Problems of Specification
3 Ideology as Social Criticism.
I. The Critical Thrust
II. Genus and Species
III. The Rhetoric of Social Criticism
IV. The Claim to Superiority
V. From Criticism to Melodrama
4 The Explanatory Model
I. Functional and Rational Explanations
II. Structure's Determination of Experience
III. Accounting for Change
IV. The Mediation of Social Conditions
V. The Historical Dimension
VI. The Vertical Integration of the Intellect
5 From Science to Rhetoric
I. Ideology and the Academic World
II. Philosophy, Science, and the Rhetoric of Unmasking
III. Disciplinary Dominoes
6 The Ideological Revelation
I. The Character of Revelation
II. The Potency of Secrecy
III. The Ground of Revelation
IV. A Mirror of Reality
7 The Concept of Mind
I. The Problem of the Ideological Terminus
II. The Ideological View of Mind
III. Species-man as Community
8 Ideology as Politics
I. Ideology and Politics Distinguished
II. The Postulate of Equality
III. The Postulate of Complementarity
9 The Ideological Version of Political Life
I. The Dissolution of Political Values
II. Interests
III. The Ideological Constituency
IV. The Quest for Power
10 Neutrality and the State
I. Forward and Reverse Gear in Ideological Argument
II. The Ideological Theory of the State
III. The Ideological Reproach
11 Conclusion
I. The Paradoxes of Ideology
II. Ideology and Modernity
III. Patterns of Confrontation
Critical Essays
Kenneth Minogue, the Individual, and Ideologies of Alienation
Stephen A. Erickson
Ideology and the Left
Paul Gottfried
Notes
Index (forthcoming)
About the author
Rexford H. Draman
Summary
Alien Powers: The Pure Theory of Ideology takes this complex intellectual construction apart, analyzing its logical, rhetorical, and psychological devices and thus opening it up to critical analysis