Habermas: Rescuing the Public Sphere

Habermas: Rescuing the Public Sphere

By Pauline Johnson

This study reconstructs major developments in Habermas' thinking about the public sphere. It marshals the significance of his life's work to illuminate what is at stake in rescuing an embattled modern public sphere.

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Book Information

Publisher: Routledge
Publish Date: 04/01/2009
Pages: 212
ISBN-13: 9780415543743
ISBN-10: 0415543746
Language: English

Full Description

If we are to believe what many sociologists are telling us, the public sphere is in a near terminal state. Our ability to build solidarities with strangers and to agree on the general significance of needs and problems seems to be collapsing. These cultural potentials appear endangered by a newly aggressive attempt to universalize and extend the norms of the market. For four decades Habermas has been trying to bring the claims of a modern public sphere before us. His vast oeuvre has investigated its historical, sociological and theoretical preconditions, has explored its relevance and meaning as well as diagnosing its on-going crises. In the contemporary climate, a systematic look at Habermas' lifelong project of rescuing the modern public sphere seems an urgent task.

This study reconstructs major developments in Habermas' thinking about the public sphere, and is a contribution to the current vigorous debate over its plight. It marshals the significance of Habermas' lifetime of work on this topic to illuminate what is at stake in a contemporary interest in rescuing an embattled modern public sphere.

Habermas' project of rescuing the neglected potentials of Enlightenment legacies has been deeply controversial. For many, it is too lacking in radical commitments to warrant its claim to a contemporary place within a critical theory tradition. Against this developing consensus, Pauline Johnson describes Habermas' project as one that is still informed by utopian energies, even though his own construction of emancipatory hopes itself proves to be too narrow and one-sided.

About the Author

Pauline Johnson is a senior lecturer in Sociology at Macquarie University, Sydney. She is the author of Marxist Aesthetics (1984).

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