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Critique of Everyday Life 3 Volume Set
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HENRI LEFEBVRE, former taxi-driver, resistance fighter, and professor of sociology at Strasbourg and Nanterre (1901-1991), was a member of French Communist Party from 1928 until his expulsion in 1957. He was the author of sixty books on philosophy, sociology, politics, architecture, and urbanism.

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"A savage critique of consumerist society." Publishers Weekly "The last great classical philosopher." Fredric Jameson "One of the great French intellectual activists of the twentieth century." David Harvey"

``The more needs a human being has, the more he exists,'' quips Lefebvre in a savage critique of consumerist society, first published in 1947. The French philosopher, historian and Marxist sociologist, who died this summer at age 90, meditates on the dehumanization and ugliness smuggled into daily life under cover of purity, utility, beauty. He deconstructs leisure as a form of social control, spanks surrealism for its turning away from reality, and attempts to get past the ``mystification'' inherent in bourgeois life by analyzing Chaplin's films, Brecht's epic theater, peasant festivals, daydreams, Rimbaud and the rhythms of work and relaxation. Rejecting the inauthentic, which he perceives in a church service or in rote work from which one is alienated, Lefebvre nevertheless seeks to unearth the human potential that may be inherent in such rituals. (Nov.)

"A savage critique of consumerist society." Publishers Weekly "The last great classical philosopher." Fredric Jameson "One of the great French intellectual activists of the twentieth century." David Harvey"

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