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Contemporary Korea Research Cluster ¨C Future Team Colloquium ¡°Moishe Postone: A Critical Theory that Critiques Critical Theory¡±

May 26, 2025

Greetings,

The Future Team of the Contemporary Korea Research Cluster invites you to a colloquium featuring a lecture and discussion with Professor Yongtaek Jung (Research Professor, Institute for Theological Thought, Hanshin University).

?Date: Monday, May 26, 2025
?Time: 4:00 PM ¨C 6:00 PM
?Venue: Room 501, IBK Communication Center (Bldg. 64), ºìÌÒÊÓÆµ


This talk explores the thought of Moishe Postone (1942¨C2018), a Jewish-Canadian critical theorist based in the U.S., as a way of rethinking the potential of contemporary critical theory.

In response to debates about the ¡°end of critique,¡± raised by figures like Bruno Latour and Jacques Ranci¨¨re, the speaker will analyze how Postone¡¯s work serves as a ¡°critical theory that critiques critical theory.¡±

Focusing on Postone¡¯s seminal book Time, Labor, and Social Domination: A Reinterpretation of Marx¡¯s Critical Theory (1993/2003), the presentation will examine key concepts such as the ¡°treadmill effect,¡± capitalism¡¯s fundamental contradictions, and the dynamics of its contradictory historical development.

Central themes will include:

  • The distinction between material wealth and value

  • The dialectic of abstract time vs. historical time

  • The paradox of value reconfiguration driven by productivity

  • The superfluity of labor and the necessity of value

Unlike traditional critical theory grounded in dichotomies such as ¡°essence vs. appearance¡± or the ¡°logic of inversion,¡± Postone¡¯s approach is positioned as a new mode of critical praxis grappling with capital as a moving contradiction.

The lecture will also explore the contemporary applicability of Postone¡¯s theory to financial capitalism, and¡ªthrough a brief concluding section¡ªdemonstrate its relevance to the analysis of ¡°exterminationist¡± hate politics in Korea¡¯s far-right Protestant movements, using Postone¡¯s controversial theory of modern antisemitism.

Ultimately, this presentation aims to investigate how Postone¡¯s work opens up a new horizon for critical theory in times of theoretical crisis¡ªand how it may contribute to understanding complex problems in today¡¯s society.

We warmly invite all those interested to join us for this thoughtful and timely discussion.

Inquiries: Teaching Assistant Yongrae Jung (jyongr422@snu.ac.kr)