Dirk Baecker's Theory of Culture: A 'book about nothing'
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22029/ko.2014.855Abstract
By and large, in his new and highly recommended book sociologist Dirk Baecker presents a theory of culture following Luhmann's claim that culture basically is a form of reflection upon social phenomena and their contingency. But how, one may ask, does society accomplish being its own spectator and not interrupt the reproduction of itself? Luhmann's answer was that culture is a historicizing perspective unfolding this paradox in time dimension. Instead, Baecker emphasizes ambiguity of expectations and ambivalent connotations of symbols as a means by which agents in modern pluralistic society are regulating the limits of their own (systems, media, organizations, etc.).
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
All articles (not book covers) in KULT_online from issue 50 on are published under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. All published articles may be reused under the conditions of the license, particularly for commercial purposes and through editing the article (Human-Readable Summary). All authors (have) permitted the publication under the above mentioned license. There is no copyright transfer towards KULT_online. For all book covers specific rights might be reserved, please contact the respective publisher for any lawful reuse. All contributions published in issue 1-49 of KULT_online are free available online and protected by the German Copyright Law.