Conversations about reflexivity

Bibliographic Information

Conversations about reflexivity

edited by Margaret S. Archer

(Ontological explorations)

Routledge, 2013

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Originally published: 2010

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

" Reflexivity" is defined as the regular exercise of the mental ability, shared by all normal people, to consider themselves in relation to their (social) contexts and vice versa. In addition to this sociological interest, it allows us to hold idle or trivial internal conversations. Focussing fully on this phenomenon, this book discusses the three main questions associated with this subject in detail. Where does the ability to be "reflexive" comes from? What part do our internal reflexive deliberations play in designing the courses of action we take: subordinate to habitual action or not? Is "reflexivity" a homogeneous practice for all people and invariant over history? In addressing these questions, contributors engage critically with the most relevant studies by luminaries such as G.H Mead, C.S. Pierce, Habermas, Luhmann, Beck, Giddens and Bourdieu. Most contributors are leading Pragmatists or Critical Realists, associated with the "Reflexivity Forum" an informal, international and inter-disciplinary group. This combination of reference to influential writers of the past, and the best of modern theory has produced a fascinating book that is essential reading for all students with a serious interest in social theory or critical realism.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations, List of contributors, 1. Introduction: The reflexive re-turn, PART I. Reflexivity and pragmatism, 2. Inner speech and agency, 3. Cartesian privacy and Peircean interiority, 4. Pragmatist and hermeneutic reflections on the internal conversations that we are, PART II. Reflexivity and realism, 5. Human reflexivity in social realism: beyond the modern debate, 6. Reflexivity and the habitus, 7. Can reflexivity and habitus work in tandem?, 8. Reflexivity after modernity: from the viewpoint of relational sociology, PART III. Modes of reflexivity, 9. The agency of the weak: ethos, reflexivity and life strategies of Polish workers after the end of state socialism, 10. Emotion, and the silenced and short- circuited self, 11. Self talk and self reflection: a view from the US, PART IV. Reflexivity in production and consumption, 12. 'Reflexive consumers': a relational approach to consumption as a social practice, 13. Organizational use of information and communication technology and its impact on reflexivity, Index

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