[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Harvie Ferguson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harvie Ferguson
NationalityUnited Kingdom British
CitizenshipBritish
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
University of Cambridge
University of Glasgow
Scientific career
FieldsSociology
InstitutionsUniversity of Leicester
University of Glasgow

Harvie Ferguson was Professor of Sociology at the University of Glasgow until his retirement in 2011. He has written extensively on the development of cultural, philosophical, and psychological aspects of the development of western modernity.

He has published research on war experience in both a modern European and Japanese perspective.[1] His most recent book in English is Self-Identity and Everyday Life (2009)

Selected works

[edit]
  • Ferguson, H. (2010), La pasión agotada. Estilos de la vida contemporánea. Buenos Aires/Madrid, Katz editores, ISBN 9788492946235
  • Ferguson, H. (2006), Phenomenological Sociology. Insight and Experience in Modern Society. London, Sage. ISBN 0761959874
  • Ferguson, H. (2000), Modernity and Subjectivity. Body, Soul, Spirit. Charlottesville, University of Virginia Press
  • Ferguson, H. (1996), The Lure of Dreams. Sigmund Freud and the Construction of Modernity. London, Routledge
  • Ferguson, H. (1994), Melancholy and the Critique of Modernity. Søren Kierkegaard's Religious Psychology. London, Routledge
  • Ferguson, H. (1992), Religious Transformation in Western Society. The End of Happiness. London, Routledge
  • Ferguson, H. (1990), The Science of Pleasure. Cosmos and Psyche in the Bourgeois World View. London, Routledge

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ See, e.g. Harvie Ferguson (2004) 'The Sublime and the Subliminal: Modern Identities and the Aesthetics of Combat,' in Theory, Culture and Society, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 1-33.

References

[edit]
[edit]
  • [1] Harvie Ferguson in University of Glasgow