New Books in Sociology

Patrick Gamsby, "Henri Lefebvre, Metaphilosophy and Modernity" (Routledge, 2025)

Nov 30, 2025
Patrick Gamsby, a scholarly communications librarian and author, dives into Henri Lefebvre’s eclectic thought. He reveals how Lefebvre’s metaphilosophy bridges theory and action, emphasizing the critique of alienation in modern life. Gamsby discusses happiness as linked to authenticity, contrasting commodified and genuine joy, while critiquing technology’s impact on ownership and sociality. He presents Lefebvre's revolutionary romanticism as a playful, human-centered approach to politics and urges us to imagine new possibilities beyond the constraints of modernity.
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INSIGHT

Metaphilosophy As Action-Oriented Thought

  • Lefebvre's 'metaphilosophy' blends disciplines to link thought and action rather than being a philosophy about philosophy.
  • He treats Marx as a precursor and insists critique must point toward transformative practice.
INSIGHT

Everyday Life And The Modern Disposition

  • Lefebvre links everyday life and modernity dialectically, seeing modernity as a disposition that reshapes common sense.
  • He locates a historical rupture around 1910 that fragments the shared space of everyday experience.
ANECDOTE

Sweetener Packet Moment

  • Gamsby recounts seeing 'Be Happy' on an artificial sweetener packet as a Lefebvrian prompt to study commodified happiness.
  • He links this everyday moment to Lefebvre's wife's anecdote about detergents sparking the critique of everyday life.
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