The Authoritarian Character Redux: The Later Fromm and the Culmination of the Frankfurt School’s Studies on Authority (151-177)

Nathisvaran Govender, Richard Sivil, and Gregory Morgan Swer

ABSTRACT: The early Frankfurt School’s Studies in Authority sought to understand modern society’s susceptibility to authoritarian leadership. This research project resulted in two major works in 1936, Fromm’s Studies on Authority and Family and Horkheimer’s Egoism and Freedom Movements, and produced the concept of the Authoritarian Character. After 1939 the project was abandoned, Fromm and the Frankfurt School went their separate ways, and the Frankfurt School’s research focus turned in a new direction. This paper argues that, appearances notwithstanding, research on the Authoritarian Character did not end in 1939 and that Fromm’s later work on necrophilia and biophilia in the 1960s-70s should be reconsidered as his attempt to complete the Frankfurt School’s research project on the Authoritarian Character.

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