Welcome to 'Global Public Life', an open forum extending the discussions and debates that the academic, peer-reviewed journals Theory, Culture & Society and Body & Society (and associated Theory, Culture & Society Book Series) have been fostering in social and cultural theory, along with the wider social sciences and humanities, for over four decades.
Review: John Smyth, ‘The Toxic University’
Reviewed by Filip Vostal
Review: Susanna Paasonen, ‘Many Splendored Things: Thinking Sex and Play’
Reviewed by João Florêncio
Review: Martijn Konings, ‘Capital and Time: For a New Critique of Neoliberal Reason’
Reviewed by Samuel Kirwan
Review: Jennifer Robertson, ‘Robo Sapiens Japanicus'
Reviewed by Mona Abaza
Review: Elizabeth Goodstein, ‘Georg Simmel and the Disciplinary Imaginary’
Reviewed by Mark Featherstone
Review: Samuel Burgum, ‘Occupying London: Post Crash Resistance and the Limits of Possibility’
Reviewed by Pete Bearder
Review: Kehinde Andrews, ‘Back to Black: Retelling Black Radicalism for the 21st Century’
Reviewed by Gabriel O. Apata
Review: Ali Rattansi, ‘Bauman and Contemporary Sociology’
Reviewed by Katy Wright
Review: Vicki Kirby, ‘What if Culture Was Nature All Along?’
Reviewed by Nick Mansfield
Review of Matthew Watson, ‘The Market’
Reviewed by William Davies
Review: Laurence Roulleau Berger, ‘Post-Western Revolution in Sociology’
Reviewed by Aurélien Boucher
Review: Andrew Feenberg, ‘Technosystem: The Social Life of Reason’
Reviewed by Alexander Thomas
Review: Paul Stenner, ‘Liminality and Experience’
Reviewed by Robbie Duschinsky and Samantha Reisz
Review: John Urry, ‘What is the Future?’
Reviewed by David Tyfield
Review: Aihwa Ong, ‘Fungible Life: Experiment in the Asian City of Life’
Reviewed by Ayo Wahlberg
Review: across & beyond – A transmediale Reader on Post-digital Practices, Concepts, and Institutions
Reviewed by Lai-Tze Fan
Review: Yuk Hui, ‘On The Existence of Digital Objects’
Reviewed by Maria Dada
Review: Michel Foucault, ‘Confessions of the Flesh’
Reviewed by Stuart Elden
Review: Jo Littler, ‘Against Meritocracy: Culture, Power, and Myths of Mobility’
Reviewed by Diane Reay
Review: Paolo Virno, ‘When the Word becomes Flesh. Language and Human Nature’
Reviewed by Arianna Bove