Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgements
- Part I
- Part II
- Part III
- Prologue: The range of Relational Subjects: where and how they emerge
- 6 When Relational Subjects generate relational goods
- 7 The emergence of collective Relational Subjects and their societal impact: beyond the market/state binary code
- 8 Relational Subjects and the ravages of globalized markets: the need for subjects with relational ethics
- 9 Conclusions: Collective subjects and the added value of social relations
- Index
Prologue: The range of Relational Subjects: where and how they emerge
from Part III
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of figures
- Acknowledgements
- Part I
- Part II
- Part III
- Prologue: The range of Relational Subjects: where and how they emerge
- 6 When Relational Subjects generate relational goods
- 7 The emergence of collective Relational Subjects and their societal impact: beyond the market/state binary code
- 8 Relational Subjects and the ravages of globalized markets: the need for subjects with relational ethics
- 9 Conclusions: Collective subjects and the added value of social relations
- Index
Summary
The range of Relational Subjects
Examples of ‘social subjects’ can be organized in a framework based on the level, type, and degree of mediation of their relations. The degree of mediation runs from a minimum (face-to-face, direct relationships) to a maximum (hyper-mediated, indirect relations, as in social mass movements). We will distinguish between three levels; micro-, meso-, and macro, where the type of mediation varies with the specific qualities of the social relations in play. Of course, various other typologies are often used; the most simple differentiates four types of spheres: mediations in the life world sphere – in the family, kinship, friendship, acquaintances; mediations in the sphere of civil society – in voluntary associations and organizations; mediations in the economic market; and mediations in the political-administrative system and its apparatuses. The three criteria of level, type and degree are intercorrelated but are not identical and are mapped in Figure P.1.
Instances of Relational Subjects at the micro-, meso-, and macro-levels
At the micro-level: the couple and informal relations
The couple – as a stable relation between two partners – is a Relational Subject if and to the extent to which the two partners act with reference to their relation (to its structure, its needs, and its conditions), being oriented to it rather than considering the relation as a function of the Selves involved. The same holds for informal relations (kinship, neighbours, friendship, etc.).
Each partner is increasingly a Relational Subject the more his/her concerns and actions are ‘centered’ on the relation with the Other. The couple as such is a relational social subject if and to the extent to which their relation as partners emerges as a reality distinct from the two individual subjects and, in turn, influences each of them.
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- Information
- The Relational Subject , pp. 183 - 197Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2015