Àròjinlẹ̀ aláyẹ̀wò: Ìyàtọ̀ láàrin àwọn àtúnyẹ̀wò

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Created page with "{{sociology}} '''Critical theory''' is an examination and critique of society and culture, drawing from knowledge across the social sciences and humanities. ..."
 
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{{sociology}}
 
'''CriticalÌròjinlẹ̀ theoryoníàgbéwò''' istabi an'''irojinle alagbeyewo''' je examinationidanwo andati [[critique|ayewo]] of [[society|awujo]] andati [[culture|asa]], drawingnipa fromlilo knowledgeimo across theinu [[social sciences|awon sayensi awujo]] andati [[humanities|awon sayensi omoniyan]]. The term has two different meanings with different origins and histories: one originating in [[sociology]] and the other in [[literary criticism]]. This has led to the very literal use of 'critical theory' as an [[umbrella term]] to describe any theory founded upon critique.
 
In the sociological context, critical theory refers to a style of [[Marxist sociology|Marxist theory]] with a tendency to engage with non-Marxist influences (for instance the work of [[Friedrich Nietzsche]] and [[Sigmund Freud]]).<ref>Outhwaite, William. 1988. ''Habermas: Key Contemporary Thinkers'' 2nd Edition (2009). p5. ISBN 9780745643281</ref> This tendency has been referred to pejoratively by stricter Marxists as [[revisionism (Marxism)|'revisionism']]. Modern critical theory arose from a trajectory extending from the [[nonpositivist]] sociology of [[Max Weber]] and [[Georg Simmel]], the [[neo-Marxist]] theory of [[György Lukács|Georg Lukács]] and [[Antonio Gramsci]], toward the milieu associated with [[Institute for Social Research|Frankfurt Institute of Social Research]].