From Damaged Life

The Critical Theory of Theodor W. Adorno

Dr Jordi Maiso author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Publishing:17th Sep '26

£70.00

This title is due to be published on 17th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

From Damaged Life cover

Examining Adorno's diagnosis of the "damaged life" created by the conditions governing existence in contemporary societies, The Critical Theory of Theodor W. Adorno asks whether emancipatory thought can still carve out spaces of hope amid the overwhelming power of social systems.

'Life does not live.'

This certainty – that the conditions governing existence in contemporary societies generate irretrievably damaged lives – lies at the heart of Theodor W. Adorno's critical theory. Emerging from the historical experience of fascism, Auschwitz, and the consolidation of advanced capitalism, Adorno’s thought articulates critique from within a damaged reality.

Under the coercion of overwhelming social powers, individual character is constituted as a “system of scars”. This notion of “damaged life” stands at the center of this book, which frames critique as emerging from a reality scarred by systemic coercion. It reconstructs Adorno’s critical theory as an analysis of the new state of unfreedom linked to total socialization, the anthropological reshaping of subjectivity under advanced capitalism, and the very possibility of critique.

Jordi Maiso's analysis spans key themes: the constellation of fascism and advanced capitalism, the culture industry's role in shaping consciousness, and the persistence of authoritarian potential in everyday life. Revisiting Adorno’s conception of critique as a “science of mourning” and his insistence on determinate negation, the book shows how critical thought confronts a historical moment in which emancipatory horizons appear blocked yet remain necessary.

Both historical and urgent, From Damaged Life: The Critical Theory of Theodor W. Adorno interrogates the persistence of fear, heteronomy, and avoidable suffering. It asks whether, under conditions marked by authoritarian regression and damaged subjectivity, critical theory can still resist resignation and keep the possibility of transformation alive.

In this book, Jordi Maiso brings the temporal core of truth in Adorno’s Critical Theory to light, opening up a privileged path of knowledge through his work * Detlev Claussen, Emeritus Professor of Social Theory, Sociology of Culture and Science at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University of Hanover, Germany *
From the Spanish-speaking world arrives the finest book on Adorno in a generation. Jordi Maiso restores Adorno to the center of Critical Theory, one focused on the global social reproduction of life and capital. Sophisticated, precise, and urgently timely * Silvia L. López, Maxine H. and Winston R. Wallin Professor of Spanish and Latin American Studies, Carleton College, USA *
Between antebellum and postbellum we are now located dead center, post prefix: at bellum. The United States has shouldered the mantel of the most dangerous nation on earth, bristling with legalized hostility to itself, to its own population who are disappeared and murdered, and flaunting invasion the world over. The destruction of the environment has been raised to presidential Diktat. In horror, we know we have been here before, and must ask whether there has ever been anything but. This is the thesis of Jordi Maiso’s brilliant, closely studied new work, From Damaged Life. That Adorno’s reflections may seem lapsed, Maiso writes, is a kind of optical illusion. For the inheritance of our day is nothing but every defeat that befell Adorno’s own. From this perspective Maiso presents a carefully reasoned, unified account of Adorno’s work, unprecedented in English, that means to speak closely to a world face-to-face with the spectre of despair. From Damaged Life is an impressive, admirable work, the result of years of research and commitment, from which there is much to learn. * Robert Hullot-Kentor, critic, translator, and author of Things Beyond Resemblance: Collected Essays on Theodor W. Adorno (2006) *
Jordi Maiso is doubtless one of the foremost Critical Theorists in the Spanish-speaking world. It is therefore so crucial to have his brilliant book available in English translation. It’s a profoundly refreshing alternative to the dominant Anglophone approaches increasingly obsessed with the question of normativity in Adorno’s thought. Maiso rescues Teddie from his “devotees” by contending that Adorno’s philosophy, which once seemed obsolete as a result of its recent domestication, lives on because the nihilistic conditions of late capitalism that produced it have, in recent, years only deepened and intensified at the global level. * Samir Gandesha, Full Professor and Director, Institute for the Humanities and Co-editor of the Journal of Adorno Studies, Simon Fraser University, Canada *

ISBN: 9781350562776

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

352 pages