10% OFF

Reassembling The Social eBook

An Introduction To Actor-Network-Theory

by Bruno Latour
language: english
Publisher: OUP Oxford, September of 2007 ‧
30,46€
10% OFF CARD
IMMEDIATE AVAILABILITY
Ebook for ADE
Latour is a world famous and widely published French sociologist known for his acclaimed writings on the relationship between people, science, and technology. His views have crystallized as 'Actor-Network-Theory' (ANT). This book is the first concise account Latour has written about ANT, with which he has come to be so closely associated with.

Reassembling The Social

An Introduction To Actor-Network-Theory

by Bruno Latour

Property Description
ISBN: 9780191622892
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Release Date: September of 2007
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Collection: Clarendon Lectures In Management Studies
Categories: eBooks in English > Social Sciences and Humanities > Philosophy
EAN: 9780191622892
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bruno Latour

Bruno Latour (1947-2022) was a French philosopher, sociologist, and anthropologist, known for his studies of science, technology, and society; he proposed a "symmetrical anthropology" of modernity in order to methodologically approximate ethnographies carried out in so-called traditional societies and those undertaken in places of scientific production, such as laboratories. Latour also proposed a symmetrical description of the modes of action of human and non-human beings in the composition of the world – which made him a recognized ecological thinker. We have never been modern. An essay on symmetrical anthropology. (1991) presents an ethnographic approach to scientific practices that allows the author to formulate critiques of the divisions between nature and culture, individual and society, subject and object, rationality and power, science and society – fundamental to official modern thought. However, ethnography within the context of scientific production reveals how these oppositions do not hold up in everyday practices, which Latour characterizes as "the unofficial character" of modernity. In his well-known manifesto, he argued that anthropology could dissolve the division between the "moderns" and the "others" by turning to the "center," to the places where authority, truth, and scientific facts are managed.

(see more)

BOOKS FROM THE SAME COLLECTION

BY THE AUTHOR