In the article I argue, through the sociologist and philosopher Bruno Latour’s works, that critique is a political endeavour. The first part of the paper analyses Latour’s description of politics as re-presentation and thereafter I argue that the necessity for re-presentative politics makes critique an essential part of politics. In the second part, an analysis of Latour’s argument that the scholar is a political actor is carried out. The conclusion is, that to the extent that the scholar expresses critique, he or she will be engaged in politics. Finally, I analyse what, according to Latour, constitutes good and bad critique from a political perspective
This article centres on Pierre Bourdieu’s conception of social critique and its political potential....
Post-truth politics poses a specific problem for critical theories. The problem is that the relativi...
As critique appears to have run out of steam, become a culprit in the culture wars, and a source of ...
This paper offers a defence of sociology through an engagement with Actor Network Theory (ANT) and p...
This article centres on Pierre Bourdieu’s conception of social critique and its political potential....
The article discusses the status and role of politics - in its various facets - in the pragmatic soc...
This contribution discusses recent debates on the adequate form of ‘critique’ with a meta-critical i...
The emergence of so-called post-truth politics has seen popular calls to return to the “facts,” acco...
What, for Latour, does politics mean? Or, to be more precise, what being for Latour is political – w...
Sociomaterial theories, including actor–network theory (ANT), materialist feminism and posthum...
The term ‘critique’ and its derivatives ‘criticality’ and ‘critical’ are commonplace in academic wri...
In this chapter, I shall first discuss the notion of ‘the political’, including the question of how...
The main purpose of this article is to provide an in-depth discussion of Luc Boltanski’s On Critique...
This article describes the meta-theoretical and theoretical foundations of one approach to critique ...
This paper attempts to briefly sketch the discursive development of critique in critical theories fr...
This article centres on Pierre Bourdieu’s conception of social critique and its political potential....
Post-truth politics poses a specific problem for critical theories. The problem is that the relativi...
As critique appears to have run out of steam, become a culprit in the culture wars, and a source of ...
This paper offers a defence of sociology through an engagement with Actor Network Theory (ANT) and p...
This article centres on Pierre Bourdieu’s conception of social critique and its political potential....
The article discusses the status and role of politics - in its various facets - in the pragmatic soc...
This contribution discusses recent debates on the adequate form of ‘critique’ with a meta-critical i...
The emergence of so-called post-truth politics has seen popular calls to return to the “facts,” acco...
What, for Latour, does politics mean? Or, to be more precise, what being for Latour is political – w...
Sociomaterial theories, including actor–network theory (ANT), materialist feminism and posthum...
The term ‘critique’ and its derivatives ‘criticality’ and ‘critical’ are commonplace in academic wri...
In this chapter, I shall first discuss the notion of ‘the political’, including the question of how...
The main purpose of this article is to provide an in-depth discussion of Luc Boltanski’s On Critique...
This article describes the meta-theoretical and theoretical foundations of one approach to critique ...
This paper attempts to briefly sketch the discursive development of critique in critical theories fr...
This article centres on Pierre Bourdieu’s conception of social critique and its political potential....
Post-truth politics poses a specific problem for critical theories. The problem is that the relativi...
As critique appears to have run out of steam, become a culprit in the culture wars, and a source of ...