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Michel de Certeau
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Michel de Certeau
Cultural Theorist



February 2001 | 160 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
de Certeau is often considered to be the theorist of everyday life par excellence. This book provides an unrivalled critical introduction to de Certeau's work and influence and looks at his key ideas and asks how should we try to understand him in relation to theories of modern culture and society.

Ian Buchanan demonstrates how de Certeau was influenced by Lacan, Merleau-Ponty and Greimas and the meaning of de Certeau's notions of `strategy', `tactics', `place' and `space' are clearly described. The book argues that de Certeau died before developing the full import of his work for the study of culture and convincingly, it tries to complete or imagine the directions that de Certeau's work would have taken, had he lived.


 
The Plane of Immanence
 
'Blasting Free', or, the Stylistic Inflection
 
Meta-Historiography
 
Heterology, or the Book We'll Never Read
 
Strategy and Tactics
 
Unknotting Place and Space