Critiques of Everyday Life

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Psychology Press, 2000 - History - 242 pages

Recent years have witnessed a burgeoning interest in the study of everyday life within the social sciences and humanities. In Critiques of Everyday Life Michael Gardiner proposes that there exists a counter-tradition within everyday life theorising. This counter-tradition has sought not merely to describe lived experience, but to transform it by elevating our understanding of the everyday to the status of a critical knowledge.
In his analysis Gardiner engages with the work of a number of significant theorists and approaches that have been marginalized by mainstream academe, including:
*The French tradition of everyday life theorising, from the surrealists to Henri Lefebvre, and from the Situationist International to Michel de Certeau
*Agnes Heller and the relationship between the everyday, rationality and ethics
*Carnival, prosaics and intersubjectivity in the work of Mikhail Bakhtin
*Dorothy E. Smith's feminist perspective on everyday life.
Critiques of Everyday Life demonstrates the importance of an alternative, multidisciplinary everyday life paradigm and offers a myriad of new possibilities for critical social and cultural theorising and empirical research.

 

Contents

poetics of everyday life
24
Bakhtins prosaic imagination
43
philosopher of the ordinary
71
revolution at
102
1
108
rationality ethics and everyday life
127
the cunning of unreason
157
a sociology for people
180
Conclusion
207
43
210
References
219
Index
237
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About the author (2000)

Michael E. Gardiner is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Western Ontario.

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