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The Country and the City

Science and Society 39 (4):481-484 (1975)

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  1. (1 other version)Hartmut Rosa’s project for critical theoryRosaHartmutSocial Acceleration: A New Theory of Modernity, translated by Trejo-MathysJonathan.Isaac Ariail Reed - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 133 (1):122-129.
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  • (1 other version)Derrida Enisled.J. Hillis Miller - 2007 - Critical Inquiry 33 (2):248.
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  • It’s the Conscience Collective, Stupid: Philosophical Aesthetics and the Sociology of Art.Andrew Milner - 2010 - Thesis Eleven 103 (1):26-34.
    The article begins with a sociologically triumphalist critique of philosophical aesthetics, grounded in the work of Ernest Gellner and Emile Durkheim. It proceeds to note the practical failure of this kind of sociology to become institutionalized within the wider discipline. It explores a number of possible explanations for this failure, but finally suggests that a normalized sociology of art requires a normalized conception of art itself, such as that tentatively advanced by Pierre Bourdieu and Franco Moretti. The article also has (...)
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  • `Nature Strip': Australian Suburbia and the Enculturation of Nature.Trevor Hogan - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 74 (1):54-75.
    Australia is a suburban nation, with 85 percent of the 20 million people clinging to the coastal fringes of the world's largest island and oldest continent. This article explores Australian suburbia as the `third space' that mediates urbanism to `nature'. It draws on the thought of George Seddon, an important initiator of ecological history, regional geography and sub/urban politics in Australia. Seddon's insights on Australian ecosystems and Australian interpretations, namings, perceptions and shapings of their natural environment since the beginning of (...)
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  • The re-accomplishment of place in twentieth century Vermont and New Hampshire: history repeats itself, until it doesn’t. [REVIEW]Jason Kaufman & Matthew E. Kaliner - 2011 - Theory and Society 40 (2):119-154.
    Much recent literature plumbs the question of the origins and trajectories of “place,” or the cultural development of space-specific repertoires of action and meaning. This article examines divergence in two “places” that were once quite similar but are now quite far apart, culturally and politically speaking. Vermont, once considered the “most Republican” state in the United States, is now generally considered one of its most politically and culturally liberal. New Hampshire, by contrast, has remained politically and socially quite conservative. Contrasting (...)
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  • What We Owe the Romantics.Lewis P. Hinchman & Sandra K. Hinchman - 2007 - Environmental Values 16 (3):333-354.
    Romanticism is recognized as a wellspring of modern-day environmental thought and enthusiasm for nature-preservation, but the character of the affinities between the two is less well understood. Essentially, the Romantics realised that nature only becomes a matter for ethical concern, inspiration and love when the mind and sensibility of the human observer/agent are properly attuned and receptive to its meaning. That attunement involves several factors: a more appropriate scientific paradigm, a subtler appreciation of the impact that the setting of human (...)
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  • Analogy as Destiny: Cartesian Man and the Woman Reader.Carol H. Cantrell - 1990 - Hypatia 5 (2):7 - 19.
    Feminist studies in the history and philosophy of science have suggested that supposedly neutral and objective discourses are shaped by pairs of dualisms, which though value-laden are assumed to inhere in the order of nature. These hierarchical pairs devalue women, particularly their bodies and their labor, as they sanction the domination of nature. Readers of literature can draw on these studies to address texts and genres which do not thematize gender but rather purport to portray "the human condition." Samuel Beckett's (...)
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  • Responding to the problem of ‘food security’ in animal cruelty policy debates: building alliances between animal-centred and human-centred work on food system issues.Brodie Evans & Hope Johnson - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (1):161-174.
    Research on ethical issues within food systems is often human-centric. As a consequence, animal-centric policy debates where regulatory decisions about food are being made tend to be overlooked by food scholars and activists. This absence was notable in the recent debates around Australia’s animal live export industry. Using Foucault’s tools, we explore how ‘food security’ is conceptualised and governed within animal cruelty policy debates about the live export trade. The problem of food security produced in these debates shaped Indonesians as (...)
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  • These Boots Are Made for Walking...: Mundane Technology, the Body and Human-Environment Relations.Mike Michael - 2000 - Body and Society 6 (3-4):107-126.
    This article begins with a consideration of the `pure' unmediated relation between the human body and nature, exemplified, in different ways, by environmental expressivism, and Ingold's subtle analysis of affordance and the taskscape. It is argued that perspectives fail properly to incorporate the role of mundane technology in the mediation of human-nature relations. Drawing upon the work of Michael Serres, and, in particular, his concept of the parasite, I explore how these mundane technological artefacts - specifically, walking boots - intervene (...)
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  • Mapping character types onto space: the urban-rural distinction in early statistical writings.Zohreh Bayatrizi - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (2):28-47.
    This article investigates the construction of urban/rural binary distinctions in 18th - and 19th-century social scientific literature, and in particular in the writings of the statistical societies in England. The 18th-century writers were primarily concerned with the spread of luxury, vice and effeminacy among the upper social strata in large cities. Later on, statisticians began to focus on moral hazards among the urban working poor. These writings are significant in several respects: they contributed to the spatial mapping of moral character, (...)
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  • Affective approaches to environmental education: Going beyond the imagined worlds of childhood?Rachel Gurevitz - 2000 - Ethics, Place and Environment 3 (3):253 – 268.
    This paper explores the claims of recent research that suggests that more affective forms of environmental education, drawing upon the contributions of the arts (e.g. creative writing, poetry, art, music and photography), can engage with children's emotions more directly than can approaches based on scientific knowledge. This, in turn, may provide a better route for encouraging individuals to engage in more environmentally sustainable behaviours. The paper challenges some of these claims by considering the ways in which they draw upon socially (...)
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  • Imagining (the) Difference: Gender, Ethnicity and Metaphors of Nation.Maureen Molloy - 1995 - Feminist Review 51 (1):94-112.
    This article critiques the way in which three feminist authors reinscribe traditional liberal values when seeking new ways of thinking about the nation. It suggests that in rejecting affective or embodied metaphors, such as community or kinship, the authors fall into the trap of reinscribing values which have historically excluded women and ethnic or racial minorities from full participation in the polity. The article argues for a rejection of the affect/rationality model which underpins these arguments and suggests that new metaphors (...)
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  • "Not lawn, nor pasture, nor mead": Rewilding & the Cultural Landscape.Andrea R. Gammon - 2018 - Dissertation,
    This dissertation is based around conceptual conflicts introduced by the notion of rewilding and the challenges rewilding poses to place and cultural landscapes. Rewilding is a recent conservation strategy interested in the return of wilder, less human-managed environments. Often presented as an antidote to increasingly homogenized, organized, and managed environments, rewilding deliberately opens up space for the return of wild nature, typically by removing human elements that have obstructed or diminished its free reign or by reintroducing locally extinct species to (...)
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  • Window Gazes and World Views: A Chapter in the Cultural History of Vision.Daniel Jütte - 2016 - Critical Inquiry 42 (3):611-646.
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  • The Kray Fascination.Chris Jenks & Justin J. Lorentzen - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (3):87-107.
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  • Virtuous marginality: Social preservationists and the selection of the old-timer. [REVIEW]Japonica Brown-Saracino - 2007 - Theory and Society 36 (5):437-468.
    Social preservation is a bundle of ethics and practices rooted in the desire of some people to live near old-timers, whom they associate with “authentic” community. To preserve authentic community, social preservationists, who tend to be highly educated and residentially mobile, work to limit old-timers’ displacement by gentrification. However, they do not consider all original residents authentic. They work to preserve those they believe embody three claims to authentic community: independence, tradition, and a close relationship to place. Underlining their attraction (...)
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  • The space of memory: in an archive.Carolyn Steedman - 1998 - History of the Human Sciences 11 (4):65-83.
    By considering the experience of historians in national and regional archives, the relationship of memory to history and historical practice is discussed. The professional experience of historians is connected to wider social and psychological uses of the past, and of history in Euro pean societies, over the 200 years since official archives were inaugur ated.
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  • Romantic Agrarianism and Movement Education in the United States: Examining the discursive politics of learning disability science.Scot Danforth - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (6):636-651.
    The learning disability construct gained scientific and political legitimacy in the United States in the 1960s as an explanation for some forms of childhood learning difficulties. In 1975, federal law incorporated learning disability into the categorical system of special education. The historical and scientific roots of the disorder involved a neuropsychological discourse that often conflated lower social class identity and learning disability. Lower class, often urban, families were viewed as providing insufficient intellectual stimulation for their young children, thereby causing learning (...)
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  • Killing time.Russell West-Pavlov - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (2):113-123.
    This essay is a fictocritical meditation upon the contemporary transformation of temporal experience as we find ourselves embarked upon an accelerating process of climate change and species extinction, including possibly that of the human species. The essay offers an extended reading of a recent villanelle published in John Kinsella’s Book of Villanelles that in turn responds to a controversial project by the Adani mining consortium to begin extracting coal over a large swathe of Wangan and Jagalingou country in the Central (...)
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  • The Unavoidable Intentionality of Affect: The History of Emotions and the Neurosciences of the Present Day.William M. Reddy - 2020 - Emotion Review 12 (3):168-178.
    The “problem of emotions,” that is, that many of them are both meaningful and corporeal, has yet to be resolved. Western thinkers, from Augustine to Descartes to Zajonc, have handled this problem by employing various forms of mind–body dualism. Some psychologists and neuroscientists since the 1970s have avoided it by talking about cognitive and emotional “processing,” using a terminology borrowed from computer science that nullifies the meaningful or intentional character of both thought and emotion. Outside the Western-influenced contexts, emotion and (...)
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  • The greening imaginary: urbanized nature in Germany’s Ruhr region.Hillary Angelo - 2019 - Theory and Society 48 (5):645-669.
    This article provides a sociological explanation for urban “greening,” the normative practice of using everyday signifiers of nature to fix problems with urbanism. Although greening is commonly understood as a reaction against the pathologies of the industrial metropolis, such explanations cannot account for greening’s recurrence across varied social and historical contexts. Through a study of greening in Germany’s Ruhr region, a polycentric urban region that has repeatedly greened in the absence of a traditional city, I argue that greening is made (...)
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  • Matters of Dwelling: Releasing the Genetically Engineered Aedes Aegypti Mosquito in Key West.Carl G. Herndl & Tanya Zarlengo - 2018 - Social Epistemology 32 (1):41-62.
    In 2011, the Florida Keys Mosquito Control District’s proposed to release a genetically engineered Aedes aegypti mosquito to fight the spread of dengue fever and chikungunya. This would be the first release of a genetically engineered insect into the open environment in the US, and the proposal has sparked heated opposition in Key West. We address this controversy through Beck’s concept of reflexive modernity, tracing the way the FKMCD and Oxitec interpret the risk involved in the situation and how citizens (...)
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  • On Ethnographic Allegory.James Clifford, Olessia Kirtchik & Andrei Korbut - 2014 - Russian Sociological Review 13 (3):94-125.
    In now classic article, James Clifford offers a novel perspective on ethnographic texts. Inspired by literary studies he uses contemporary ethnographic works to question ethnography’s claims of scientific objectivity and a clear distinction between allegorical and factual. If ethnography aims to keep its contemporary relevance, it should specifically focus on allegory as an intrinsic quality of ethnographic texts This kind of analysis may assume that any ethnographic text accounts for facts and events but at the same time it tackles the (...)
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  • Introduction to the special issue on science fiction.Andrew Milner & Sean Redmond - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 131 (1):3-11.
    This introduction to a special issue of Thesis Eleven devoted to science fiction begins by exploring the way the genre has been handled by German and French critical theory and their Anglophone equivalents. It proceeds to a discussion of the historical sociology of the genre and, thence, to an account of what it terms the dialectic of science fiction endangerment. Finally, it concludes with a brief overview of the various contributions to the issue.
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  • Is there a Postmodern Sociology?Zygmunt Bauman - 1988 - Theory, Culture and Society 5 (2-3):217-237.
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  • Reimagining modern politics in the European mountains: confronting the traditional commons with the neo-rural conception of the common good.Ismael Vaccaro, Oriol Beltran & Camila Del Mármol - forthcoming - Theory and Society.
    Since at least the 1970s, the countryside of Western Europe has been the site of a myriad of “new” communal initiatives. Rural areas that were abandoned during the last century have witnessed the arrival of new inhabitants. These newcomers often flock to the mountains escaping urban lifestyles characterized by individualism, mass-oriented livelihoods, and isolation. Many of these individuals move to areas like the Catalan Pyrenees, where common property and communal institutions have had a strong historical presence. In embracing rural life, (...)
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  • The Tourist Gaze and the `Environment'.John Urry - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (3):1-26.
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  • Aesthetic, social and ecological values in landscape architecture: A discourse analysis.Ian Thompson - 2000 - Ethics, Place and Environment 3 (3):269 – 287.
    This paper presents the results of a qualitative investigation into the ethical and aesthetic values held by late- and mid-career landscape architects in the UK. It identifies the dominant discourses within three value areas, the aesthetic, the social and the environmental. Within the web of value discourses, some are clearly conflicting, while others are compatible or mutually supporting. The most prevalent values are those associated with 'technocentric accommodation'. A 'trivalent' approach to design is advocated which combines values from the three (...)
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  • (1 other version)Mapping Ecologists’ Ecologies of Knowledge.Peter J. Taylor - 1990 - PSA Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1990 (2):95-109.
    Ecologists, particularly those who consider socially generated effects in the environment, grapple with complex, changing situations. Historians, sociologists and philosophers studying the construction of science likewise attempt to account for (or discount) a wide variety of influences, which make up what historian Charles Rosenberg has called “ecologies of knowledge” (Rosenberg 1988). This paper introduces a graphic methodology, mapping, designed to assist researchers at both levels—in science and in science studies—to work with the complexity of their material. By analyzing the implications (...)
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  • The genesis and structure of moral universalism: social justice in Victorian Britain, 1834–1901.Michael Strand - 2015 - Theory and Society 44 (6):537-573.
    Sociologists generally agree that history affects or conditions moral belief, but the relationship is still only vaguely understood. Using a case study of the appearance of social justice beliefs in Victorian-era Britain, this article develops an explanation of the link between history and morality by applying field theory to capture the historical genesis of a field. A moral way of evaluating poverty and inequality developed slowly over the course of the nineteenth century in Britain, with a trajectory extending back to (...)
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  • From Omega to Mr. Adam: The Importance of Literature for Feminist Science Studies.Susan Squier - 1999 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 24 (1):132-158.
    The simultaneous publication in 1992 of two texts dealing with a global decline in sperm potency, P. D. James’s The Children of Men and Elisabeth Carlsen’s “Evidence for Decreasing Quality of Semen during the Past 50 Years,” inaugurates the exploration of another kind of sterility: the failure of feminist literary criticism and feminist science studies to converge as a fertile zone of inquiry and analysis. This article considers the modern discipline of literary studies, as well as feminist literary criticism and (...)
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  • Citizens, Denizens and the Res Publica: Environmental Ethics, Structures of Feeling and Political Expression.Mick Smith - 2005 - Environmental Values 14 (2):145 - 162.
    Environmental ethics should be understood as a radical project that challenges the limits of contemporary ethical and political expression, a limit historically defined by the concept of the citizen. This dominant model of public being, frequently justified in terms of a formal or procedural rationally, facilitates an exclusionary ethos that fails to properly represent our concerns for the non-human world. It tends to regard emotionally mediated concerns for others as a source of irrational and subjective distortions in an otherwise rationally (...)
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  • The elusive sovereign: New intellectual and social histories of capitalism.Jeffrey Sklansky - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (1):233-248.
    Intellectual history in the United States has long borne a peculiarly close kinship to social history. The twin fields rose together a century ago in a filial revolt against the cloistered, conservative study of political institutions. Sharing a progressive interest in social thought and social reform, they joined in the self-styled “social and intellectual history” of the interwar decades. After mid-century, however, they moved in divergent directions. Many social historians adopted the quantitative methods of the social sciences, documenting the diverse (...)
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  • (1 other version)Hartmut Rosa’s project for critical theory.Isaac Ariail Reed - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 133 (1):122-129.
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  • The peculiarities of English.Nick Perry - 1993 - History of the Human Sciences 6 (3):91-100.
    Peter Widdowson, Hardy in History: A Study in Literary Sociology. London and New York: Routledge, 1989. £8.95, 260 pp. Simon During, Foucault and Literature: Towards a Genealogy of Writing. London and New York: Routledge, 1992. £35.00/£10.99, 259 pp.
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  • Lawlessness, Modernity and Social Change: A Historical Appraisal.Geoffrey Pearson - 1985 - Theory, Culture and Society 2 (3):15-35.
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  • Perth as a ‘big’ city: Reflections on urban growth.Peter Newman - 2016 - Thesis Eleven 135 (1):139-151.
    The bigness of cities has attracted much attention from urban academics and professionals whose perspective may be divided into two camps: productive science using agglomeration-based analysis or impact science using anxiety-based analysis. The two approaches need to be joined in order to resolve issues of urban ‘bigness’, and in this article the growth of Perth is used to illustrate the potential and challenges of this integration.
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  • Under the Lawn: Engaging the water cycle.Sharon Moran - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (2):129 – 145.
    This paper explores how several water technologies mediate people's relationship with nature in the domestic sphere. While septic systems are critical to the built environment in exurban North America, they remain largely unacknowledged. Their hidden participation in the backyards of private homes silently facilitates—yet outwardly denies—people's continued engagement in the water cycle. Now, a growing array of alternative practices (e.g. composting toilets and greywater systems) are being embraced by individuals choosing to intervene in their local ecology in an active manner. (...)
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  • Cultural Materialism, Culturalism and Post-Culturalism: The Legacy of Raymond Williams.Andrew Milner - 1994 - Theory, Culture and Society 11 (1):43-73.
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  • The secret life of things: Rethinking social ontology.Iordanis Marcoulatos - 2003 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 33 (3):245–278.
    Despite a recent resurgence of interest in social ontology, the standard conceptualization of social/cultural objects reiterates dichotomies such as nature and culture, subjectivity and objectivity: the objective components of a social/cultural environment are usually divided into their material substratum, natural or manufactured, and their imposed or assigned social import. Inert materiality and subjectively or intersubjectively assigned meanings and functions remain distinct as constitutive aspects of a reality that is intuitively experienced as a whole. In contrast—by means of examining a broad (...)
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  • Visually branding the environment: climate change as a marketing opportunity.David Machin & Anders Hansen - 2008 - Discourse Studies 10 (6):777-794.
    While there has been extensive work on the textual realizations of climate change in the media, there has been little on the way such discourses are realized and promoted visually. This article addresses this using Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis to examine a new collection of images from the globally operating Getty Images intended for use in promotions, advertisements and editorials. Getty is promoting this collection in terms of Green Issues being a `marketing opportunity'. In this article we consider the results (...)
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  • Gender, Nationality and Cultural Representations of Ireland: An Irish Woman's Place?Pauline Maclaran, Stephen Brown & Lorna Stevens - 2000 - European Journal of Women's Studies 7 (4):405-421.
    Ireland has struggled with its ‘feminine’ identity throughout its history. The so-called ‘chasmic dichotomy of male and female' is embedded in colonial and postcolonial constructions of Irishness and it continues to manifest itself in contemporary cultural representations of Ireland and Irishness. This study explores issues of gender and nationality via a reading of a 70-second television advertisement for Caffrey's Irish Ale, titled ‘New York’. The article suggests that, although colonial and postcolonial discourse on Ireland continues to perceive the ‘feminine’ in (...)
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  • Realism, Naturalism and Television Soap Opera.Brian Longhurst - 1987 - Theory, Culture and Society 4 (4):633-649.
    This paper argues that the concept of soap-opera realism, as developed in some of the recent critical writing on soap opera, is central to the understanding of this form of television drama. However, in its present form, this concept is insufficiently nuanced. In developing the concept, the work of Raymond Williams is drawn upon to delineate three sub-types of soap-opera realism: soap-opera realism in the subjunctive mode, soap-opera realism in the indicative mode, and soap-opera naturalism. The latter is then discussed (...)
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  • Dystopian Times? The Impact of the Death of Progress on Utopian Thinking.Ruth Levitas - 1982 - Theory, Culture and Society 1 (1):53-64.
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  • From Arbiter to Omnivore. The Bourgeois Transcendent Self and the Other in Disorganised Modernity.Tony Kearon - 2012 - Human Studies 35 (3):383-399.
    This article will examine the emergence of a distinct bourgeois identity in modernity which differentiated itself from comparable social groups through its desire to exert 'virtuous' control through engagement with reform and philanthropy, and through the symbolic construction of a transgressive, socially marginal but redeemable other as subject of this reform. The ontological insecurities of late modernity had a profound impact on the sources of bourgeois identity, and this article will explore the emergence of the cultural omnivore as a new (...)
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  • (2 other versions)Nasłuchiwanie Urbanocenu. Ludzie – Dźwięki – Miasta // Listening to the Urbanocene. People – Sounds – Cities.Marek Jeziński & Edyta Lorek-Jezińska - 2020 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 11 (3).
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  • The kinsellaverse.Tony Hughes-D'Aeth - 2021 - Angelaki 26 (2):4-7.
    John Kinsella’s poetry returns again and again to the landscape of the Western Australian wheatbelt. The wheatbelt is a region that was suddenly and violently re-made by capital in the service of cereal and fibre production during the course of the twentieth century. Despite this radical repurposing of land and the wholesale eradication of an ancient biome, the new farming zone quickly took on the halo of a natural landscape within state and nationalist ideologies. Against the backdrop of this event, (...)
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  • Identity Formation, Space and Social Centrality.Kevin Hetherington - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (4):33-52.
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  • Abstract Experience.Andrew Goffey - 2008 - Theory, Culture and Society 25 (4):15-30.
    The speculative philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead offers critical social and cultural theory an unusual way of rethinking the place and value of experience in its concerns. This article explores the challenges that Whitehead's approach to experience, deliberately contrasted with the subject-object thinking of modernity, creates. The article seeks to provide an account of the importance of Whitehead's appeal to naïve experience and of how this appeal counters some of the problems of more recent and more familiar accounts of the (...)
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  • Playing for All in the City: Women's Drama.Alison Findlay - 2010 - Feminist Review 96 (1):41-57.
    English women's drama was crucially shaped by the city between 1660 and 1705, the period when female actors and playwrights first entered the professional theatre. This article uses selected scenes from the comedies of Elizabeth Polwhele, Aphra Behn and Susanna Centlivre to examine how women coped with the high-risk strategy of participating in commercial theatre and the vast circulation of trade which grew up around the City, a flamboyant sign of high capitalism. On one hand, the city represents movement, a (...)
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