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Peter L. Berger (1929-2017) and Thomas Luckmann (1927-2016) were international sociologists who made vast contributions to the sociology of knowledge, driven primarily by their highly acclaimed book The Social Construction of Reality (1966/1967). Their "new" sociology of knowledge takes as its starting point experience and action. However, it is not a microsociology limited to everyday action orientation. For human activity does not take place only in an already ordered world, it also produces a "world of things" (Berger & Luckmann, 1966/1967, p. 18). A sociology of this kind examines the realization of social actionalso in relation to its enabling conditions and unrealized alternatives. And, with the help of contrastively constructed ideal types, it observes and analyzes the resulting sociohistorical realities in their respective interrelatedness and ...
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Benita Luckmann (1925-1987) was a Latvian-born social scientist who taught in Austria, Germany, and the United States and who gained notoriety for her research on exile and small lifeworlds, among other topics. With her research background in the Russian Mir, a German small town, and the University in Exile (now the New School for Social Research) in New York, she approached her research topics in a way that anticipated recent developments in research on (post)traditional communities, community studies, and the spatial turn in general. After providing a brief biographical sketch, this entry explores the five primary themes of Luckmann's work and concludes by looking at the reception and subsequent impact of her work.
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