Georges Haupt, 1928-1978.Paul Breines -1978 -Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1978 (36):167-168.detailsGeorges Haupt died of a heart attack in March of this year. He was 50 years old. His name and work were not known to all Telos associates and readers, but for those who had felt even briefly his extraordinary spirit and energy, his death, a great shock, casts a shadow on everything. For Georges Haupt was a model of that rare type—the catalyst, the inspirer, a personal and intellectual life-force. It is a rotten but typical fact that only with (...) his death do we begin to realize just how many lives he touched, how much work he encouraged, how many projects he helped initiate, how wonderful a socialist intellectual he was. (shrink)
Redeeming Redemption.Paul Breines -1985 -Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1985 (65):152-158.detailsThe nice thing about Telos 63 is that, as with most of its sixty-two predecessors, paradox and tension are not altogether foreign to it. So while the main drift of the contributions dealing directly with the journal's political reorientation is unfortunate, it is not the only drift there is. The remarkable lead article by Paggi and Pinzauti, for example, runs in many respects against Telos' recent grain. Its “non-political” and pacifist reinterpretation of the issue of peace and security manages, among (...) other achievements, to restore to these pages at least momentarily a politics of redemption, while Feher's “Redemptive and Democratic Paradigms in Radical Politics” and Whitebook's “Politics of Redemption” are aimed at purging from radicalism all redemptive residues. (shrink)