The political
and social revolutions of the
nineteenth century, the pivotal
writings of Goethe, Marx, Dostoevsky,
and others, and the creation
of new environments to replace
the old - all have thrust us
into a modern world of contradictions
and ambiguities. In this fascinating
book, Marshall Berman examines
the clash of classes, histories,
and cultures, and ponders our
prospects for coming to terms
with the relationship between
a liberating social and philosophical
idealism and a complex, bureaucratic
materialism.
From a reinterpretation
of Karl Marx to an incisive
consideration of the impact
of Robert Moses on modern urban
living. Berman charts the progress
of the twentieth-century experience.
He concludes that adaptation
to continual flux is possible
and that therein lies our hope
for achieving a truly modern
society. |