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‘Habermas and the Public Sphere edited by Craig Calhoun ‘The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusets, and London, England our png 86 To ances eof Tchnlagy At grove No prof ths bok maybe repdaced in any omy 09 ‘len or nett mest cing phocopying fering loraion ‘Serge tnd eur bo pomean swing oe te putes be Uae Se ot Anes fae ‘aera andthe pl per de by Cig Clon ree ee et tomer Geta ec ugh Ns 2as)088 ay, OaeeaseS on Scion) Metedeogy~Conprene 2 Habermay, Jorgen, Seuureandel + Oech Ege Congres. Sol seycute Conese Sine FR atge"Canpomn 1 Con Somat Contents Preface | Introduction: Habermas and the Public Sphere Craig Calhoun I Philosophical Models 2 Practical Discourse: On the Relation of Morality to Politics Thomas McCarthy 3. Models of Public Space: Hannah Arendt, the Liberal Tradition, and Jurgen Habermas Seyla Benhabib 4 The Public Sphere: Models and Boundaries Peer Uwe Hohendaht 5 Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy Nancy Fraser 6 Was There Ever a Public Sphere? IfSo, When? Reflections on the American Michael Schudson 1 Political Theory and Historical Analysis -Moishe Patone a 9 3 164 Gane I Historical Publics '8 Defining the Public Sphere in Eighteenth- Century France: Variations on a Theme by Habermas Keith Michael Baker 9 Religion, Science, and Printing in the Public Spheres in Seventeenth-Century England David Zare 10 Habermas, History, and Critical Theory Llayd Kramer 11 Gender and Public Access: Women’s Politics in Nineteenth-Century America Mary P. Ryan 12 Nations, Publics, and Political Cultures: Placing Habermas in the Nineteenth Cencury Geoff Eley 13 The Pragmatic Ends of Popular Politics Harry C. Boste II Public Communication 14 The Media and the Puble Sphere Nicholas Garnham 15 The Mass Public and the Mass Subject Michael Warmer 16 ‘Textualty, Mediation, and Public Discourse Benjamin Lee IV Conclusion and Response 17 Further Reflections on the Publie Sphere Jargen Habermas 18 Concluding Remarks Contributors Index 181 a2 236 259 289 340 359 377 402 2 481 485 Preface Efforts to understand the history, foundations, and internal processes of public discourse ate gaining importance in several disciplines. They inform democratic theory in political science, the self-reflection of literary and other cultural critics, the mod ‘ernism/pastmodernism debate in philosophy and cultural stud ies, new approaches in ethics and jurisprudence, and empirical studies in sociology, history, and communications. The debate has been influenced deeply by a variety of Jigen Habermas's works. Surprisingly absent from the discussion, atleast in En- glish, has been ome of Habermas's most important and directly Felevant early works, The Structural Transformation ofthe Public Sphere Though this work has been among Habermas's most influential in German, and though it has been translated into several languages, it has only recently appeared in English, 27 years after publication of the German original. “The translation is propitiously timed. The book is certain to inform scholarship on problems of the relationship of state and civil society, the origins of and prospects for democracy, and the impact of the media, Perhaps even mote important, the book's integrated treatment of these and other issues promises to enrich current work by drawing researchers from {ifferent disciplines into a common discourse. Structural Trans- {formation vill alo. surprise readers of Habermas’ later work {including not only his fans but some who deride him as the new Parsons), This is by far the most historically concrete of Habermas's major works, building its theoretical argument

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