1st Edition

Agency without Actors? New Approaches to Collective Action

240 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

The question of agency is a key issue in social theory and research. The discourse of human agency as an effect of social relations is deeply intertwined with the history of sociological thought. However, in most recent discussions the role of non-humans gains a substantial impact concerning agency. Agency without Actors? New Approaches to Collective Action asks: Are nonhumans active, do they... Read more

Note on Contributors  1. Introduction  Part 1: Events, Suggestions, Accounts  2. Suggestion and Satisfaction: On the Actual Occasion of Agency by Paul Stronge and Mike Michael  3. Science, Cosmopolitics and the Question of Agency: Kant’s Critique and Stengers’ Event by Michael Schillmeier  4. Questioning the Human/Non-Human Distinction by Florence Rudolf  5. Agency and "Worlds" of Accounts: Erasing the Trace or Rephrasing the Action? by Rolland Munro  Part 2: Contribution, Distribution, Failures  6. Distributed Agency and Advanced Technology, Or: How to Analyze Constellations of Collective Inter-Agency by Werner Rammert  7. Distributed Sleeping and Breathing: On the Agency of Means in Medical Work by Cornelius Schubert  8. Agencies’ Democracy: "Contribution" as a Paradigm to (Re)thinking the Common in a World of Conflict by Jacques Roux  9. Reality Failures by John Law  Part 3: Interaction, Partnership, Organization  10. "What’s the Story?" Organizing as a Mode of Existence by Bruno Latour  11. Researching Water Quality with Non-Humans: An ANT Account by Christelle Gramaglia & Delaine Sampaio Da Silva  12. Horses – Significant Others, People’s Companions, and Subtle Actors by Marion Mangelsdorf

Biography

Jan-Hendrik Passoth teaches Media Sociology, Science and Technology Studies and Social Theory at Bielefeld University. He is working on problems of social structure and infrastructures, human and non-human agency and discourse and material culture.

Birgit Peuker teaches Macrosociology at the Technical University Dresden. Her research interests lie in the Sociology of Science and Technology and the Sociology of Risk.

Michael Schillmeier teaches Sociology, Science and Technology Studies and Empirical Philosophy at the Department of Sociology at Ludwig-Maximilians University in Germany. He currently holds a Schumpeter Fellowship to research ‘Innovations in Nano-Medicine’.