This book is a theory-informed, comparative and historical exploration of the notion of the public sphere within Western and Islamic traditions. It situates the emergence of the modern public sphere in a wider historical and theoretical context than usually done in conventional analyses. The work traces cross-cutting genealogies spanning conventional borders between tradition and modernity, and in particular between the Western and the Islamic world. This approach unsettles received, evolutionary views of the public sphere as an exclusive legacy of Western political cultures. The public sphere is finally reconceived as a complex platform for the modern cultivation of culturally diverse, competing, yet intersecting discourses.
This book explores conceptual and institutional developments of the notion of the public sphere in the West and in the Islamic world, tackling historic ruptures spanning the formation and transformation of the Euro-Mediterranean world. Set against an imploding grammar of socio-political life, the modern liberal public sphere appears in a new light.
This book explores conceptual and institutional developments of the notion of the public sphere in the West and in the Islamic world, tackling historic ruptures spanning the formation and transformation of the Euro-Mediterranean world. Set against an imploding grammar of socio-political life, the modern liberal public sphere appears in a new light.
'This is an ambitious, original and sophisticated work that breaks new ground in several fields. Salvatore's comparative analysis of traditions and civilizations places the whole debate on the public sphere and civil society in a broader context. The discussion of parallels and connections between European and Islamic traditions is particularly insightful. The multi-traditional focus is underpinned by a distinctive hermeneutical approach that rescues the notion of genealogy from its postmodern practitioners and puts it to better uses. Philosophical and sociological interpretations of the Axial Age are drawn into dialogue with main currents in contemporary social theory. Last but not least, Salvatore proposes a new reading of Giambattista Vico, an enigmatic but crucially important figure in the history of European thought, and makes the most convincing case so far presented for his relevance to current debates.' - Johann P. Arnason, La Trobe University, Melbourne/Charles University, Prague
'This is a book most remarkable for its scope and sophistication, destined to attain a strong impact in more than one field of scholarship. It contributes to an innovative and significant, multidisciplinary project, generally known as the study of 'multiple modernities'. One never has the impression that the author is overwhelmed by the richness and variety of the sources he mobilizes and debates.' - Gianfranco Poggi, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Virginia, USA
'Salvatore's The Public Sphere offers one of the most ambitious and original attempts at social-theoretical reconstruction which I have read in a long time. Its aim is nothing less than the theoretical-practical rehabilitation of 'tradition' as the foundation of public reason in the public sphere. But the purpose of this rehabilitation is neither traditionalist nor conservative. . .the book offers highly insightful and original contributions to social theory as well as to comparative historical analysis.' - José Casanova, Archives Européennes de Sociologie/European Journal of Sociology
'Here is a study that is impressively multi-disciplinary and genuinely cross-cultural; a veritable intellectual adventure that is rewarding for academics and intellectuals of every hue and stripe. Whether your interest be modern theory or medieval hermeneutics, whether it is the sociology of religion or political theology that attracts you, or whether you simply want to understand contemporary politics and the ideological underpinnings of its rhetoric ('War on Terror'), Salvatore's volume ought to be on your reading list.' - S. Parvez Manzoor, Journal of Islamic Studies
'a great achievement contemporary sociological theory will be greatly enriched' - David L. Johnston, The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences
'This is a book most remarkable for its scope and sophistication, destined to attain a strong impact in more than one field of scholarship. It contributes to an innovative and significant, multidisciplinary project, generally known as the study of 'multiple modernities'. One never has the impression that the author is overwhelmed by the richness and variety of the sources he mobilizes and debates.' - Gianfranco Poggi, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Virginia, USA
'Salvatore's The Public Sphere offers one of the most ambitious and original attempts at social-theoretical reconstruction which I have read in a long time. Its aim is nothing less than the theoretical-practical rehabilitation of 'tradition' as the foundation of public reason in the public sphere. But the purpose of this rehabilitation is neither traditionalist nor conservative. . .the book offers highly insightful and original contributions to social theory as well as to comparative historical analysis.' - José Casanova, Archives Européennes de Sociologie/European Journal of Sociology
'Here is a study that is impressively multi-disciplinary and genuinely cross-cultural; a veritable intellectual adventure that is rewarding for academics and intellectuals of every hue and stripe. Whether your interest be modern theory or medieval hermeneutics, whether it is the sociology of religion or political theology that attracts you, or whether you simply want to understand contemporary politics and the ideological underpinnings of its rhetoric ('War on Terror'), Salvatore's volume ought to be on your reading list.' - S. Parvez Manzoor, Journal of Islamic Studies
'a great achievement contemporary sociological theory will be greatly enriched' - David L. Johnston, The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences