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Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique

DOI link for Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique

Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique book

The Everyday as Critique

Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique

DOI link for Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique

Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique book

The Everyday as Critique
ByHoward Feather
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2000
eBook Published 12 January 2018
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315205236
Pages 174 pages
eBook ISBN 9781315205236
SubjectsSocial Sciences
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Feather, H. (2000). Intersubjectivity and Contemporary Social Theory: The Everyday as Critique. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315205236

This title was first published in 2000: This text covers a range of views on intersubjectivity/communication. It sees the scope of intersubjectivity as taking in theories of common sense, ideology, discourse and the philosophy of language as well as the more obvious phenomenological concerns. The author examines the coherence of discursivity in post-modernist and other social constructionist accounts by situating them in relation to the everyday. An alternative model of discursivity is presented which uses Dummett's reading of Frege's work on meaning to criticise the (post)structuralist axiom that language is separate from the world. The counter argument developed is that discursive practices are not purely textual "surfaces", but have a deep structure which unites text and world. The work references semiotics, discourse theory, Marxism, phenomenological sociology, cultural theory, spatiality and historicity, psychoanalysis and themes in the philosophies of language and Spinoza.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|14 pages

Making Sense of Social Subjects: Reflexivity, Perception, Praxis and the Everyday

ByHoward Feather

chapter 2|24 pages

The Limits of the Phenomenological Perspective

ByHoward Feather

chapter 3|24 pages

The Limits of the Phenomenological Perspective

ByHoward Feather

chapter 4|20 pages

From Structuralism to Phenomenology: Connotation, Denotation and Meaning Context

ByHoward Feather

chapter 5|14 pages

Sense and Reference: The Everyday as Basis and Critique of Classification Systems

ByHoward Feather

chapter 6|22 pages

Discursive Realism: Self-Referentiality and the ‘Depth’ of Meaning

ByHoward Feather

chapter 7|22 pages

Space, Time and the Everyday: Jameson and Osborne

ByHoward Feather

chapter 8|4 pages

Afterword

ByHoward Feather
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