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Robin Wagner-Pacifici is the University in Exile Professor of Sociology at the New School for Social Research. She is the author of a number of books, most recently The Art of Surrender: Decomposing Sovereignty at Conflict's End, also published by the University of Chicago Press.
"Robin Wagner-Pacifici's What Is an Event? is a powerful and
beautifully crafted attempt to lay the groundwork for both a
definition of an 'event' as well as a methodological approach for
studying events as social researchers. Perhaps most audaciously, it
intimately ties ontology and methodology...the book's generative
strength is in the kind of theoretical and empirical work it
potentially opens up."--Iddo Tavory "American Journal of
Sociology"
"What Is an Event? is a sustained meditation about what
Wagner-Pacifici has called the 'restlessness' of events. She
develops a 'political semiotics' of the event, elaborating and
classifying the speech acts and other symbolic performances that
attempt to comprehend, represent, steer, deflect, or bring to an
end events--but that often have the effect of pushing them
unpredictably forward. Anyone interested in the dynamics of history
will have much to learn from this remarkable book."-- "William H.
Sewell, Jr., University of Chicago"
"What Is an Event? is an attempt by one of contemporary sociology's
most brilliant practitioners to theorize the process by which we
come to perceive and narrate particular stretches of history as
'events.' Drawing on official documents, novels, paintings, and
personal narratives, Wagner-Pacifici examines the way we
conceptualize beginnings, pauses, turning points, trajectories, as
well as the historical background from which events such as
shootings, stock market crashes, and revolutions 'emerge' or
'erupt.' The result is a remarkably ambitious sociological theory
of the 'shape' of the past."-- "Eviatar Zerubavel, Rutgers
University"
"What Is An Event? is an intellectual treat. Charting how and why
events matter, it animates a wide range of cultural texts--from
seventeenth century paintings to twenty-first century violence,
from political revolutions to financial crises--and demonstrates
how they transform across time and space en route to taking their
place at the forefront of historical and social thought. Eloquently
phrased and elegantly formulated, the book showcases
Wagner-Pacifici's theoretical sophistication, singular analytical
acumen, and splendid prose. This is Wagner-Pacifici at her
finest."-- "Barbie Zelizer, Raymond Williams Professor of
Communication, University of Pennsylvania"
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