The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere
An Inquiry Into a Category of Bourgeois Society
1. Edition September 1989
328 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
This major work retraces the emergence and development of the Bourgeois public sphere - that is, a sphere which was distinct from the state and in which citizens could discuss issues of general interest. In analysing the historical transformations of this sphere, Habermas recovers a concept which is of crucial significance for current debates in social and political theory.
Habermas focuses on the liberal notion of the bourgeois public sphere as it emerged in Europe in the early modern period. He examines both the writings of political theorists, including Marx, Mill and de Tocqueville, and the specific institutions and social forms in which the public sphere was realized.
This brilliant and influential work has been widely recognized for many years as a classic of contemporary social and political thought, of interest to students and scholars throughout the social sciences and humanities.
Part I. Preliminary Demarcation of a Type of Bourgeois Public
Sphere.
Part II. Social Structures of the Public Sphere.
Part III. Political Functions of the Public Sphere.
Part IV. The Bourgeois Public Sphere: Idea and Ideology.
Part V. The Social-Structural Transformation of the Public
Sphere.
Part VI. The Transformation of the Public Sphere's Political
Function.
Notes.
Index.
analysis of one of the central notions on which both our political
life and our political theories rest: 'public opinion'.
Presidential candidates worry about it, the press talks about it,
political scientists try to measure it, but Habermas is one of the
few people to have actually sat down and tried to think
about it, to ask what it means to have an 'opinion' that is not
private, not idiosyncratic, but rather 'public'.'
James Schmidt, Boston University
including The New Conservatism (Polity 1990), The
Philosophical Discourse of Modernity (Polity 1991), and
Postmetaphysical Thinking (Polity 1992).