Creating publics
Revision as of 11:29, 17 September 2023 by Michael Murtaugh (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Some notes from Michael Warner, Publics and Counter-publics (2006?) 1. A public is self-organized; publics do not exist apart from the discourse that addresses them 2. A public is a relation among strangers 3. The address of public speech is both personal and impersonal 4. A public is constituted through mere attention 5. A public is the social space created by the reflective circulation of discourse 6. Publics act historically according to the temporality of their circ...")
Some notes from Michael Warner, Publics and Counter-publics (2006?)
1. A public is self-organized; publics do not exist apart from the discourse that addresses them 2. A public is a relation among strangers 3. The address of public speech is both personal and impersonal 4. A public is constituted through mere attention 5. A public is the social space created by the reflective circulation of discourse 6. Publics act historically according to the temporality of their circulation 7. A public is poetic world making