Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Henri Lefebvre
View through CrossRef
Henri Lefebvre is now established as one of the most important social theorists of the 20th century. Over a long life (b. 1901–d. 1991) he wrote and published prodigiously more than sixty books and several hundred articles on a range of issues and themes. His legacy and lasting impact not only includes being the most influential and seminal theorist on the reprioritization of space in social and critical analysis but also recognition for his contribution to the analysis of everyday life, modernity, the Right to the City, and the urban. He continues to influence and inspire research across a number of disciplines and fields; these include rural and regional studies, sociology, geography, politics, philosophy, and urban studies. Lefebvre’s commitment Marxism; his nondogmatic and humanist approach to the definition, discussion, extension, and application of key concepts; and his integration of those concepts into his various analyses of the rural and the city, of the state, of space and politics, and of modernity and everyday life led him to a conflicted relationship and at times marginalization within the structuralist-influenced French Academy and the Communist Party of France in which he was a member for thirty years. His anti-Stalinist stance and nonconformist opposition to the structural determinism prevalent within the party led to his expulsion, but throughout the 1960s, as professor of sociology at the University of Strasbourg and latterly at the new university at Nanterre, he became one of the most respected teachers and intellectuals inspiring and influencing the May 1968 student revolt. Lefebvre’s work after that, still influenced and committed to Marxist dialectics and critique, increasingly focused on the urban, the social production of space, everyday life, modernity, and the survival of capitalism. Of these his introduction of the concept of the right to the city and the social production of space have been immensely influential for a range of urban scholars and theorists and his work as a whole is being increasingly adopted, adapted, and extended by a variety of researchers of the city in a range of disciplines. The works selected below reflect Lefebvre’s long career and extensive corpus of work. However, only those books and articles that have been translated into English are included here. They represent his exegesis of Marxism and its application to a range of themes that were applied or are important for urban analysis. The secondary literature cited is organized thematically and while not comprehensive provides an overview of the expanding literature on, about, and applying Lefebvrian analysis.
Title: Henri Lefebvre
Description:
Henri Lefebvre is now established as one of the most important social theorists of the 20th century.
Over a long life (b.
1901–d.
1991) he wrote and published prodigiously more than sixty books and several hundred articles on a range of issues and themes.
His legacy and lasting impact not only includes being the most influential and seminal theorist on the reprioritization of space in social and critical analysis but also recognition for his contribution to the analysis of everyday life, modernity, the Right to the City, and the urban.
He continues to influence and inspire research across a number of disciplines and fields; these include rural and regional studies, sociology, geography, politics, philosophy, and urban studies.
Lefebvre’s commitment Marxism; his nondogmatic and humanist approach to the definition, discussion, extension, and application of key concepts; and his integration of those concepts into his various analyses of the rural and the city, of the state, of space and politics, and of modernity and everyday life led him to a conflicted relationship and at times marginalization within the structuralist-influenced French Academy and the Communist Party of France in which he was a member for thirty years.
His anti-Stalinist stance and nonconformist opposition to the structural determinism prevalent within the party led to his expulsion, but throughout the 1960s, as professor of sociology at the University of Strasbourg and latterly at the new university at Nanterre, he became one of the most respected teachers and intellectuals inspiring and influencing the May 1968 student revolt.
Lefebvre’s work after that, still influenced and committed to Marxist dialectics and critique, increasingly focused on the urban, the social production of space, everyday life, modernity, and the survival of capitalism.
Of these his introduction of the concept of the right to the city and the social production of space have been immensely influential for a range of urban scholars and theorists and his work as a whole is being increasingly adopted, adapted, and extended by a variety of researchers of the city in a range of disciplines.
The works selected below reflect Lefebvre’s long career and extensive corpus of work.
However, only those books and articles that have been translated into English are included here.
They represent his exegesis of Marxism and its application to a range of themes that were applied or are important for urban analysis.
The secondary literature cited is organized thematically and while not comprehensive provides an overview of the expanding literature on, about, and applying Lefebvrian analysis.
Related Results
La rebelión del espacio vivido
La rebelión del espacio vivido
The dissertation arises from the awakening of Henri Lefebvre’s work, both in social sciences with Marxist approach and urban studies interested in social issues. This scientific an...
Utopian Prospect of Henri Lefebvre
Utopian Prospect of Henri Lefebvre
Utopia is the lynchpin of Lefebvre’s enterprise. Attempting to understand architecture and the city with Lefebvre but without Utopia impoverishes his theoretical construct. His eth...
El derecho a la ciudad desde Henri Lefebvre hasta David Harvey. Entre teorizaciones y realización
El derecho a la ciudad desde Henri Lefebvre hasta David Harvey. Entre teorizaciones y realización
Este artículo de opinión confronta la concepción de Henri Lefebvre del “derecho a la ciudad” con la de David Harvey. Una confrontación que tanto o más que un ejercicio académico, t...
Socialisme industriel et socialisme paysan
Socialisme industriel et socialisme paysan
Cet inédit issu du fonds d’archives Henri Lefebvre est la retranscription d’une conférence prononcée en 1959 qui porte sur l’évaluation des enjeux des luttes paysannes, mal saisis ...
Commoning with Henri Lefebvre
Commoning with Henri Lefebvre
In this article, I ask how Henri Lefebvre’s oeuvre can contribute to the foundations for a metromarxist theory of urban commoning. To provide an answer to this question I discuss t...
Henri Lefebvre, Space and Folklore
Henri Lefebvre, Space and Folklore
The complex spatial thinking of Henri Lefebvre and its implications for folkloristics are explored in the context of a fictitious conversation between him and the author as they wa...
Sobre la forma urbana. Vida urbana y ciudad de Henri Lefebvre
Sobre la forma urbana. Vida urbana y ciudad de Henri Lefebvre
En sus trabajos relativos al espacio urbano, Henri Lefebvre dedicó algunos interesantes pasajes a reflexionar sobre la forma urbana, de un modo más esquemático y quizá por ello ...
Lefebvre’s Politics of Space: Planning the Urban as Oeuvre
Lefebvre’s Politics of Space: Planning the Urban as Oeuvre
Henri Lefebvre’s project, developed over decades of research produced a corpus of work that sought to reprioritise the fundamental role of space in the experience and practice of s...

