Blurry image of a glass reflection

Publications

(1993) MIT Press.

in C. Calhoun, ed.  Habermas and the Public Sphere, Cambridge, MA:  MIT Press, pp. 1-48.

Reprinted in J. Appleby, et. al, Knowledge and Postmodernism in Historical Perspective. London: Routledge, 1996.

Reprinted in P. Beilharz, ed.: Postwar American Critical Thought. London: Sage, 2005

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction: Habermas and the public sphere Craig Calhoun

Chapter 2 Practical discourse: On the relation of morality to politics Thomas McCarthy

Chapter 3 Models of public space: Hannah Arendt, the liberal tradition, and Jürgen Habermas Seyla Benhabib

Chapter 4 The public sphere: Models and boundaries Peter Uwe Hohendahl

Chapter 5 Rethinking the public sphere: A contribution to the critique of actually existing democracy Nancy Fraser

Chapter 6 Was there ever a public sphere? If so, when? Reflections on the American case Michael Schudson

Chapter 7 Political theory and historical analysis Moishe Postone

Chapter 8 Defining the public sphere in Eighteenth-century France: Variations on a theme by Habermas Keith Michael Baker

Chapter 9 Religion, science and printing in the pbulci spheres in Seventheenth-century England David Zaret

Chapter 10 Habermas, history and critical theory Lloyd Kramer

Chapter 11 Gender and public access: Women's politics in Nineteenth-century America Mary P. Ryan

Chapter 12 Nations, publics, and political cultures: Placing Habermas in the Nineteenth century Geoff Eley

Chapter 13 The pragmatic ends of popular politics Harry C. Boyte

Chapter 14 The media and the public sphere Nicholas Garnham

Chapter 15 The mass public and the mass subject Michael Warner

Chapter 16 Textuality, mediation, and public discourse Benjamin Lee

Chapter 17 Further Reflections on the public sphere Jürgen Habermas

Concluding remarks

(with E. LiPuma and M. Postone), (1993) Cambridge: Polity Press and Chicago: University of Chicago Press..

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1
Aesthetic foundations of Democratic politics in the work of Hannah Arendt Kimberly F. Curtis

Chapter 2
The odor of judgment: Exemplarity, propriety, and politics in the company of Hannah Arendt Kirstie M. McClure

Chapter 3
Propriety and provocation in Arendt's political aesthetic Susan Bickford

Chapter 4
Communication and transformation: Aesthetics and politics in Kant and Arendt Anthony J. Cascardi

Chapter 5
"Please sit down but don't make yourself at home": Arendtian "visiting" and the prefigurative politics of consciousness-raising Lisa Disch

Chapter 6
Communication, transformation, and consciousness-raising Nancy Fraser

Chapter 7
Hannah Arednt: Modernity, alienation, and critique Dana R. Villa

Chapter 8
Hannah Arendt and the meaning of the public/private distinction Eli Zaretsky

Chapter 9
Plurality, promises and public spaces Craig Calhoun

Chapter 10
Must politics be violent? Arendt's utopian vision John McGowan

Chapter 11
"The banality of evil" reconsidered Richard J. Bernstein

Chapter 12
Working in ?

Chapter 13
Afterword: Reflective judgments by a spectator on a conference that is now history Martin Jay