释义 |
Marcusian, a. and n.|mɑːˈkuːzɪən| [f. the name of Herbert Marcuse (1898–1979), American philosopher and writer.] A. adj. Of, pertaining to, or connected with Marcuse or his political views. B. n. One who holds the political views of Marcuse.
1968Economist 20 July 25/3 In Italy, as elsewhere, it has brought to the surface a number of groups who are more articulate than the mass and can variously and very approximately be classified as maoist, trotskyist, castroist, marcusian and so forth. 1968Listener 31 Oct. 594/2 (heading) Marcusians. Ibid., The boring old proletariat is unrepresented in this Marcusian world. 1969Guardian 2 Sept. 9/6 Marcuse, and the hippie generation who represent Marcusian premature antifascists, herald a radical shift towards the sensory, the imaginative and the quietist. 1969Pacifist Oct. 5/2 A Marcusian analysis of the developed world shows the system beginning to transcend itself where it is most successful. 1970G. Greer Female Eunuch 309 The Red Stockings..concentrate on consciousness-raising in the Marcusian sense. 1970A. MacIntyre Marcuse iv. 53 The whole recapitulation thesis in its Marcusean form [is] untenable. 1971Guardian 19 Jan. 10/1 It will be asked whether the Guevarist or Marcusian infection is beginning to take effect in this country. |