Ok, he's not dead yet, but Jurgen Habermas nonetheless seems to have been resurrected lately. His critique of Foucault in The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere should earn him a spot among "The Prophets," as well as his thoughts on "Representational" culture and his insistence that the cultural and social practices we associ…
Ok, he's not dead yet, but Jurgen Habermas nonetheless seems to have been resurrected lately. His critique of Foucault in The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere should earn him a spot among "The Prophets," as well as his thoughts on "Representational" culture and his insistence that the cultural and social practices we associate with The Enlightenment are relevant, vital, and an unfinished "work in project."
Ok, he's not dead yet, but Jurgen Habermas nonetheless seems to have been resurrected lately. His critique of Foucault in The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere should earn him a spot among "The Prophets," as well as his thoughts on "Representational" culture and his insistence that the cultural and social practices we associate with The Enlightenment are relevant, vital, and an unfinished "work in project."