2016
DOI: 10.1177/1368431016677977
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Becoming public characters, not public intellectuals

Abstract: Research into the sociology of intellectual life reveals numerous appeals to the public conscience of intellectuals. The way in which concepts such as "the public intellectual" or "intellectual life" are discussed however, conceals a long history of biased thinking about thinking as an elite endeavour with prohibitive requirements for entry. This article argues that this tendency prioritises the intellectual realm over the public sphere, and betrays any claims to public relevance unless a broader definition of… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Even though we feel like ‘outsiders’ within our academic department since our research style differs from the Business School's intelligentsia, local communities can likewise be suspicious of academics and their role in making places better. Such a challenge necessitates a shift to what Fatsis (2018) calls a ‘public character’, building on Jacobs’s (1961: 68) notion of a ‘person who is public, present and talks to lots of different people’ on the ground. This openness can also allow us to navigate people's passions and tensions in the urban sphere, through discussions that are open and inclusive (Davidson, 2020), as we have done in the hundreds of stakeholder workshops conducted across and beyond the UK.…”
Section: On Being Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even though we feel like ‘outsiders’ within our academic department since our research style differs from the Business School's intelligentsia, local communities can likewise be suspicious of academics and their role in making places better. Such a challenge necessitates a shift to what Fatsis (2018) calls a ‘public character’, building on Jacobs’s (1961: 68) notion of a ‘person who is public, present and talks to lots of different people’ on the ground. This openness can also allow us to navigate people's passions and tensions in the urban sphere, through discussions that are open and inclusive (Davidson, 2020), as we have done in the hundreds of stakeholder workshops conducted across and beyond the UK.…”
Section: On Being Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At a time when the views of scientific experts are regularly and publicly challenged, there is a growing need for them to explain and defend their views in the public sphere, which inevitably commits them to public discourse (Gattone, 2012 ; Lavazza and Farina, 2020 ). It is also increasingly difficult for them to assume the position of neutral observers while they are continuously undermined by populist figures and conservative media, and while the capacity for their institutions to promote the public good are diminished by neoliberal inspired corporatisation (Baltodano, 2012 ; Broom, 2011 ; Fatsis, 2018 ; Mintz, 2021 ). Ultimately, without a greater presence of qualified intellectuals in the public sphere who are willing to go toe-to-toe with the populists, we end up with what Robinson ( 2018 ) describes as the intellectuals we deserve.…”
Section: Kt In a Post-truth Political Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assessments of public intellectualism are subject to attempts to both breathe new life into it (Baert, 2015) as well as ongoing critiques. The latter, in both gentler and more forceful forms, tend see it as an outdated term, particularly in a multi-mediated landscape (Eyal & Buchholz, 2010; Fatsis, 2018). I share Eyal and Buchholz’s (2010) view that it is invoked in ways that tend to dichotomise the academic or scholarly from the real world or treat intellectuals as a specific class.…”
Section: Disambiguating Hall: More Than a Public Intellectualmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Though this is not new and disillusionment with intellectuals has been a refrain since the beginning of the 20th century; see Kurzman & Owens, 2002). Hence, discussions around public intellectuals ‘often read like a recital of lamentations, jeremiads and dramatic tales that describe the fall, betrayal, disappearance, decline and absence of intellectuals’ (Fatsis, 2018, p. 269).…”
Section: Disambiguating Hall: More Than a Public Intellectualmentioning
confidence: 99%