Textuality and Tectonics
48 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
In the marketplace of ideas, Social Science, plc, is in deep trouble! Exposed for decades to a 'climate of problematization', its foundational structures and technological practices - indeed the very project of a science of the social - have been eroded by critical, post-structural, social constructionist and postmodern analyses.
Textuality and Tectonics seeks neither to gloat upon this threatened bankruptcy, nor to peddle false hopes of a 'quick fix' restructuring under new management. Instead it concentrates upon and argues out the new prospects, alternative projects and liberated commitments opened up by the 'climate of problematization' itself.
It takes on this task seriously but far from somberly, celebrating the chance 'to boldly go' on a diversity of new enterprises, in a narrative rich in lively asides and opportunities for reflection. The result is a concerned 'critical polytextualism' which stresses the possibilities for new forms of transdisciplinary analytic craft and illustrates their use in practice.
. Textuality and Tectonics will be a key text for students and scholars looking for new conceptual directions and alternative craft-skills for empirical enquiry at a time when 'social science' is 'going critical'. It will be invaluable not just for those working in its conventional disciplines (including anthropology, psychology and sociology) but for those in newer fields such as cultural and communication studies.
Textuality and Tectonics seeks neither to gloat upon this threatened bankruptcy, nor to peddle false hopes of a 'quick fix' restructuring under new management. Instead it concentrates upon and argues out the new prospects, alternative projects and liberated commitments opened up by the 'climate of problematization' itself.
It takes on this task seriously but far from somberly, celebrating the chance 'to boldly go' on a diversity of new enterprises, in a narrative rich in lively asides and opportunities for reflection. The result is a concerned 'critical polytextualism' which stresses the possibilities for new forms of transdisciplinary analytic craft and illustrates their use in practice.
. Textuality and Tectonics will be a key text for students and scholars looking for new conceptual directions and alternative craft-skills for empirical enquiry at a time when 'social science' is 'going critical'. It will be invaluable not just for those working in its conventional disciplines (including anthropology, psychology and sociology) but for those in newer fields such as cultural and communication studies.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.