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This book seeks to re-integrate Lefebvre's
Critique of Everyday Life into studies of urbanization and combines analytical-methodological exploration, pedagogic mission, and theoretical advances to create an everyday-theory-based approach to urban studies situated at the interface of the spatial arts, humanities, and social sciences.
Table des matières
Part 1. Paving the Ground 1. Everyday Life and Urban Studies. An Introduction
Part 2. Studying Space, Understanding the Social 2. Research on Cities, Urbanization and Urban Societies 3. Urban Studies and the Minutiae of Everyday Life 4. Critical Social Perspectives in Spatial Theory
Part 3. Revisiting Critiques of Everyday Life throughout the 20th Century 5. Dialectics and Rising Fascism: Everyday Life and Philosophy in Crises 6. Postwar Geographies of Everyday Life and the Question of Scaling the Lived 7. International Critiques of Everyday Life since the 1980s
Part 4. Towards Contemporary Critiques of Everyday Life 8. The Uncanny Character of Everyday Life 9. Everyday Life as a Fetishized Form of Colonization, Consumption and Power 10. Feminist Perspectives Beyond Domination and Marginalization
Part 5. Worlding the Study of Everyday Life in Urban Studies 11. Post-colonial Everyday Life: Differences, Commonalities and Temporalities 12. Urban Resistance, Street Politics and the Persistence of the Ordinary
Part 6. Everyday Life and the Philosophy of Science 13. Studying Everyday Life Beyond Spatial Praxis and Social Action 14. Urban Studies, Everyday Life and the Philosophy of Science
Part 7. The Praxis of Urban Studies 15. Urban Field Work: Who Researches How? 16. Which Encounters Take Place during Urban Field Research? 17. Objects of Urban Research: What to Study? 18. Transdisciplinary Paths of Urban Research: How to Study?
Part 8. Towards Transformative Epistemologies: An Everyday-Theory Based Approach to Urban Studies 19. Crossovers - Towards Transformative Epistemologies of the Everyday 20. An Everyday-Theory Based Approach to Urban Studies
A propos de l'auteur
Sabine Knierbein is an Associate Professor and the Head of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Urban Culture and Public Space at the Faculty of Architecture and Planning at Technische Universität Wien in Austria. She holds a Venia in urban studies and a Journey(wo)man's certificate as a landscape gardener. Sabine has worked as Visiting Professor for Urban Political Geography at the University of Florence.