PhDThis thesis considers from a theoretical and historical standpoint the different political implications of experiencing togetherness as a source of pleasure and joy. The first part critically reflects upon the discourse of “sociability” developed from early modernity to the 19th century and examines the most significant institutional formations that characterised its practice, with a particular focus on the passage from aristocratic salons to the bourgeois world of cafes. The sociability of the upper classes is then compared and contrasted with the forms of collective joy of the plebs, critically accounting for the way in which subjectivity and the body are differently implicated in the discourses surrounding carnivals, collecti...
Living with people who differ—racially, ethnically, religiously, or economically—is the most urgent ...
Today’s urban public spaces are confronted with numerous issues, which are eroding solidarity, boost...
This thesis investigates attitudes to happiness in the early modern period and literary representati...
If, as Harriet Guest has noted, “in recent years some of the most exciting work on late eighteenth- ...
This thesis explores the relationship between social and individual forms of ordering social life on...
Literature in the nineteenth century often featured highly structured scenes of domestic entertainin...
The Thesis discusses the significance of significance in the development and maintenance of social r...
This thesis explores how feelings affect the politics of living together in a de-industrialized, pos...
Defence date: 22 November 2011Examining Board: Professor Donatella della Porta (EUI, Supervisor); Pr...
In recent years, an interest in measuring and increasing citizens’ happiness has characterised many ...
This thesis investigates the connection between social relations and the development of scientific t...
The concept of pleasure has emerged as a multi-faceted social and cultural phenomenon in studies of ...
In this article we ask in what way can the notion of care, collectivizing and the collective become ...
This thesis describes and analyses lower-class culture in inner-urban Sydney from 1887 to 1914 as it...
Waves of contemporary social justice movements keep bringing people together to address urgent crise...
Living with people who differ—racially, ethnically, religiously, or economically—is the most urgent ...
Today’s urban public spaces are confronted with numerous issues, which are eroding solidarity, boost...
This thesis investigates attitudes to happiness in the early modern period and literary representati...
If, as Harriet Guest has noted, “in recent years some of the most exciting work on late eighteenth- ...
This thesis explores the relationship between social and individual forms of ordering social life on...
Literature in the nineteenth century often featured highly structured scenes of domestic entertainin...
The Thesis discusses the significance of significance in the development and maintenance of social r...
This thesis explores how feelings affect the politics of living together in a de-industrialized, pos...
Defence date: 22 November 2011Examining Board: Professor Donatella della Porta (EUI, Supervisor); Pr...
In recent years, an interest in measuring and increasing citizens’ happiness has characterised many ...
This thesis investigates the connection between social relations and the development of scientific t...
The concept of pleasure has emerged as a multi-faceted social and cultural phenomenon in studies of ...
In this article we ask in what way can the notion of care, collectivizing and the collective become ...
This thesis describes and analyses lower-class culture in inner-urban Sydney from 1887 to 1914 as it...
Waves of contemporary social justice movements keep bringing people together to address urgent crise...
Living with people who differ—racially, ethnically, religiously, or economically—is the most urgent ...
Today’s urban public spaces are confronted with numerous issues, which are eroding solidarity, boost...
This thesis investigates attitudes to happiness in the early modern period and literary representati...