Anti-Oedipus
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- | [[Wilhelm Reich]] tried to join [[Marxism]] and [[psychoanalysis]] in studies of [[fascism]], producing a very popular book, ''[[The Mass Psychology of Fascism]]''. When it was published in [[1933]], it banned by the [[Nazis]] and Reich moved to the [[United States]] in [[1939]], where he continued his [[orgone]] research. | ||
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In ''[[The Anti-Œdipus]]'', [[Gilles Deleuze]] and [[Félix Guattari]] followed up [[Wilhelm Reich|Reich]]'s problem: "why did the [[working class|masses]] desire [[fascism]]?", which led them to a critique of [[Freudo-Marxism]]. | In ''[[The Anti-Œdipus]]'', [[Gilles Deleuze]] and [[Félix Guattari]] followed up [[Wilhelm Reich|Reich]]'s problem: "why did the [[working class|masses]] desire [[fascism]]?", which led them to a critique of [[Freudo-Marxism]]. | ||
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In The Anti-Œdipus, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari followed up Reich's problem: "why did the masses desire fascism?", which led them to a critique of Freudo-Marxism.
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