Nathisvaran Govender

North-West University
  •  118
    Walter Benjamin was a critical theorist and lover of architecture, and he spent most of his career studying urban spaces and places. In this paper, we use his theory of architecture to develop a normative critique that can be used to analyse public architecture in the context of the South African built environment. In this regard, we argue that architecture has to function simultaneously as a cultural sign and a material presence, and that failure to meet these criteria will result in the creati…Read more
  •  685
    The Authoritarian Character Redux: The Later Fromm and the Culmination of the Frankfurt School’s Studies on Authority
    Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 12 (2): 151-177. 2025.
    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. T…Read more
  •  487
    I argue in this paper that Paulo Freire’s work Pedagogy of the oppressed should be reconsidered as a contribution to critical theory, given its proximity to first-generation critical theory concerning both theory and praxis. Pedagogy of the oppressed, I argue, is well suited to provide a viable praxis for the social critique provided by first-generation critical theory. While Freire’s critique in Pedagogy of the oppressed can be viewed typically as pedagogical in character, if we consider Freire…Read more
  •  823
    The Authoritarian Character Revisited: Genesis and Key Concepts
    Symposion: Theoretical and Applied Inquiries in Philosophy and Social Sciences 11 (2): 213-238. 2024.
    This paper revisits the conceptual history of the early Frankfurt School’s investigations into the authoritarian character, the set of sadomasochistic character traits that dispose an individual or group to seek their own domination. This research project, which produced Fromm’s Studies on Authority and Family and Horkheimer’s Egoism and Freedom Movements in 1936 and ended in 1939 with Fromm’s expulsion from the Frankfurt School, is generally held to have been a theoretically-unproductive and ab…Read more