Contributors
Introduction
1. Nancy Fraser - Transnationalizing the Public Sphere: on the
Legitimacy and Efficacy of Public Opinion in a Post-Westphalian
World
2. Kate Nash - Towards Transnational Democratization?
3. Kimberley Hutchings - Time, Politics and Critique: rethinking
the ‘when’ question
4. Nick Couldry - What and Where is the Transnationalized Public
Sphere?
5. Fuyuki Kurasawa - Putting the Social Back into the Transnational
Public Sphere
6. David Owen - Dilemmas of Inclusion: the all-affected principle,
the all-subjected principle and transnational public spheres
7. Nancy Fraser - Publicity, Subjection, Critique: A Reply to My
Critics
Nancy Fraser is Henry A. and Louise Loeb Professor of Political and Social Science and Department Chair at the New School for Social Research. Kate Nash is Joint Director of the Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy at Goldsmiths, University of London, and a Fellow of the Center for Cultural Sociology at Yale University.
"For all those interested in the difficult but urgent questionof how to decouple the public sphere from its national limitations,the critical debate represented in this book is by far the beststarting-point. Anyone who reads the whole debate will undergo atrue learning process - a judgement that can be made about very fewbooks!" Axel Honneth, Columbia University, New York, and GoetheUniversity, Frankfurt Transnationalizing the Public Sphere is a central readingfor students and scholars in the fields of media and socialmovements. LSE Review of Books "Nancy Fraser has long been one of the most original voices ininterdisciplinary social and political theory. Here she brings newperspectives to the basic question of whether democracy and publicengagement can be effective beyond the increasingly problematiccontainers of nation-states." Craig Calhoun, London School of Economics and PoliticalScience
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