Which theory of communication is “political correctness”?

Authors

  • Michael Nnamdi Konye Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawla II, Aleje Racławickie 14, 20-950 Lublin

Keywords:

Cultural Marxism, 68-er Bewegung, kyriarchy, Gutmensch, politiquement correcte, Kotobagari, Allan Bloom, McCarthyism, Mao Zedong, Max Horkheimer, Jürgen Habermas

Abstract

The paper focuses on ‟political correctness”, which has become a late 20th century catch-phrase in Western European and North American liberal democracies but also  has found currency in the political climate of the Asian and Eastern countries. A historical and multi-cultural review is intended as an introduction to a broader philosophical analysis of the Marxist backgrounds of political correctness and its neo-Marxist theoretical correctives in Jürgen Habermas’s theory of communicative action. My aim is to draw out both the educational and cultural implications of laying out the ethos of contemporary discourse on the foundations of the evolving dynamics of the rhetoric of political correctness.

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Author Biography

  • Michael Nnamdi Konye, Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski Jana Pawla II, Aleje Racławickie 14, 20-950 Lublin

    MA Studies accomplished in Philosophy and B.Th, in Theology. Current scientific interests focused on philosophical anthropology and theological anthropology

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Published

2016-09-10

How to Cite

Konye, M. N. (2016). Which theory of communication is “political correctness”?. Journal of Education Culture and Society, 7(2), 53-74. https://jecs.pl/index.php/jecs/article/view/10.15503.jecs20162.53.74