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Agency (philosophy)

About: Agency (philosophy) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10461 publications have been published within this topic receiving 350831 citations. The topic is also known as: Thought & Human agency.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a transition as a fluid unfolding of network activities by diverse actors aligned with a particular stream, resulting in a transformed system, rather than a systemic fight between alternative systems (niches) and dominant systems (the regime).

98 citations

Book
11 Mar 1998
TL;DR: The role of desire in agency and structure is discussed in this article, where Giddens' Modernism Lite is compared to the New Versus the Old Rules of Sociological Method.
Abstract: 1. Introduction 2. Anthony Giddens: The Last Modernist 3. The New Versus the Old Rules of Sociological Method 4. The Role of Desire in Agency and Structure 5. Gidden's Political Sociology 6. Gidden's Modernism Lite 7. Unlimited Agency as the New Anomie 8. Conclusions

98 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that people from cultures stressing independence are more personally agentic and people from culture stressing interdependence are more collectively agentic, which results in culturally contrasting differences in cognition and human motivation.
Abstract: This paper examines agency as a mechanism that can predict cultural differences in human motivation. In elaborating on the theory of self-construal (Markus & Kitayama, 1991) and drawing on past research on culture, we propose that people from cultures stressing independence are more personally agentic, whereas people from cultures stressing interdependence are more collectively agentic—which results in culturally contrasting differences in cognition and human motivation. Specifically, it is hypothesized that personal agents perceive agency to emanate from the self and, in turn, exhibit greater intrinsic motivation toward actions perceived as self-initiated, whereas collective agents perceive agency to lie within the collective and, in turn, exhibit greater intrinsic motivation toward behaviors perceived to originate from a collective. Such a framework elucidates current empirical research in the area of culture, cognition, and motivation as well as enables predictions about the contexts that can ...

98 citations

Book
01 Jan 1992
TL;DR: Unsettling Relations: The University as a Site of Feminist Struggles as discussed by the authors is a collection of challenging and readable essays by five women, each of whom is involved in feminist politics and academic teaching/research.
Abstract: UnsettlingRelations: The University as a Site of Feminist Struggles is a collection of challenging and readable essays by five women, each of whom is involved in feminist politics and academic teaching/research. As its title suggests, the book is concerned with the university as a set of social relations which are involved in the production of power and privilege, together with feminist struggles to resist and change them. Framed in this general way, the book is located intellectually within the now quite long history of feminist critique of the academy as a maledominated, liberal and middle-class preserve. Not surprisingly, therefore, some important parts of its conceptual framework are drawn from previously well-known feminist workparticularly that ofthe feminist sociologist Dorothy Smith. Two features are worth noting here: one is the notion that academic knowledge production is always inscribed within social and cultural relations of ruling. The second is the conviction that authentic (rather than simply 'academic') knowledge is intimately connected with although not a direct reflection ofour bodily, sensuous and practical experiences in daily life. Where the book is quite distinctive is in the sustained, detailed and critical attention it pays to the powers and privileges which are to be found, and which must be challenged, in the social relations of feminist pedagogy and research. Here, the authors' starting point is in more recent critiques of the way that many women have been socially positioned as 'other' and as 'different' by a white, middle-class, heterosexual and able-bodied hegemony in feminist knowledge. As one of the contributors to the volume has written previously, such practices have produced 'silences or absences, creating gaps and fissures through which non-white women, for example, disappear from the social surface' (Bannerji, 1987:11). A further aim of Unsettling Relations, therefore, is to write the experiences of many previously neglected women into analyses of feminist academic relations. In order to achieve this, the introduction describes how each contributor to the volume has been enjoined to centre 'race' and class as well as gender, and to reflexively include a history of her own personal experiences of social positioning, within her chapter. Following a brief 'introduction' to the background and aims of the book, a number of the main themes are developed in the first chapter by Linda Carty. Her own experiences of racism in education are used to illustrate the history of black people's marginalization in academic knowledge including feminist theory, given the construction of whiteness as a 'neutral' reference point. Kari Delhi explores how her whiteness has positioned her in relations of power over other women, and argues that white middle-class women must resist the comforts and seductions of university as 'home'. The third chapter by Himani Bannerji poses the question of why feminist research and pedagogy has been unable to validate non-white women's experiences, subjectivities and direct agency. She then answers this question by providing a critical account of feminist epistemologies (essentialist, politics of difference and Marxist/ socialist), and by arguing for a 'reflexive and relational social analysis which incorporates in it a theory of agency and direct representation based on our experience' (p. 94). One important benefit of this approach is that it works out a political position

98 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that algorithms are an outcome rather than a replacement of media logics, and ultimately, this argument is advanced by connecting human agency to media logic by laying out the role of algorithms and agency for the dimensions and elements of network media logic.
Abstract: We argue that algorithms are an outcome rather than a replacement of media logics, and ultimately, we advance this argument by connecting human agency to media logics. This theoretical contribution...

98 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20247
20235,872
202212,259
2021566
2020532
2019559