A theoretical framework distinguishing between pathological forms of critical theory (obscurantist jargon, performative radicalism, rejection of all standards) and valid forms that offer genuine insight into power, ideology, and social transformation. Valid critical theory uses the tools developed by the Frankfurt School and related traditions—critique of ideology, analysis of domination, attention to contradiction—to understand society and guide emancipatory practice. It's rigorous, self-aware, and committed to clarity; it doesn't reject truth but asks whose truth serves whom; it doesn't abandon reason but critiques its capture by power. Valid critical theory is critical theory as tool, not identity—as method, not membership.
Example: "He actually read Adorno instead of just citing him, could explain concepts clearly, and engaged seriously with objections—Valid Critical Theory, not the performance of radicalism that gives critique a bad name."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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