Date: Mon, 15 May 2000 06:48:06 -0500 From: John Peterson <jvpeters-AT-midway.uchicago.edu> Subject: Re: HAB: Origins of "das Unbehag der Moderne" Hi--just a wild guess, but the title of Charles Taylor's short book _The Malaise of Modernity_ might derive from the phrase (and the text might identify its post-Freud genealogy). Vic At 11:13 AM 5/15/00 +0200, you wrote: > > >"Jeremy J. Shapiro" wrote: > >> It is derived ultimately from Freud's 1931 essay "Das Unbehagen in der Kultur" ("Discomfort with Civilization", published in English as "Civilization and its Discontents"). I can't remember who transferred it to modernity. >> >> Jeremy > > Thanks Jeremy- I will lokk at the puyblication. . Any other who has any commment? > >I wrote: > >> >> >> At 09:06 AM 5/12/00 +0200, your brain seems to have output the following: >> >I need a short commentary/reference to the origin of the word " Das Unbehag der >> >Moderne". >> >I now Habermas has wrote about it. But was it Adorno who coined the word. >> >I believe those on this list can give a very quick and simple answer. >> > >> >From >> > >> >Dag Helge Moldenhagen >> >Rdyrveien 4, 43oo Sandnes. >> > >> > >> > >> > --- from list habermas-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu --- >> >> ______________________________________________________________ >> >> Dr. Jeremy J. Shapiro >> Prof., Human & Org. Devel. -- Sr. Consultant, Acad. Info. Projects >> The Fielding Institute >> Owner, The Jeremy J. Shapiro Bookstore at >> http://idt.net/~jshapir/bookstore/center.html >> _____________________________________________________________ >> >> --- from list habermas-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu --- > > > > --- from list habermas-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu --- > --- from list habermas-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu ---
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