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Aimed at academics and researchers in the fields of Marketing, Communication Studies, Sociology and beyond, this book constructs a research platform retracing the theory of practices research from its philosophical beginning towards a shared territory that can be located, recognized as being past and present hermeneutics.
Sommario
Introduction: Crossing Hermeneutic Horizons of Culture and Discipline
Chapter One: Mind the Gap?: Bridging Philosophical Hermeneutics and Practice Theories
Chapter Two: Hermeneutic Social Theory of Practices: Conjoining Philosophy and Sociology
Chapter Three: Hermeneutic Practices in the Business School: Reflection In/On Habituated Consuming
Chapter Four: Consuming Psychology: Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis: Thematic Understanding in Hermeneutic Practices
Chapter Five: Consumer Practices Viewing Screens: A Hermeneutic Perspective on Constructing Identities
Conclusion: Hermeneutic Practices: From Anthony Giddens to Algorithmically Generated ‘Horizons of Understanding’ (Hans-Georg Gadamer)
Info autore
Tony Wilson is a Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Media and Communications. He has taught extensively in universities, both for arts and social science faculties (in Australia, England, Malaysia and Scotland) and economics and business faculties (in Malaysia). The present monograph is his seventh book on hermeneutics.
Riassunto
Aimed at academics and researchers in the fields of Marketing, Communication Studies, Sociology and beyond, this book constructs a research platform retracing the theory of practices research from its philosophical beginning towards a shared territory that can be located, recognized as being past and present hermeneutics.
Testo aggiuntivo
"The book works best if seen as a single long meditation on how we need to think today about the sheer diversity and depth of our entanglements with media. Although its language is intricate and complex, the book repays the reader's efforts as an impassioned and highly distinctive contribution to current debates about how researchers should equip themselves to grapple with bewildering change in the modern media sensorium. Wilson's deeply informed choice of a hermeneutic approach that remains fully attentive to technological complexity (for example Twitter and Youtube) is very welcome at a time when Big Data approaches seem to hold all the cards in the social sciences." Nick Couldry, London School of Economics, University of London, UK