John O'Neill (sociologist)
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John O'Neill (July 17, 1933 - September 7, 2022) was a Canadian sociologist, phenomenologist, and social theorist known for his writings on critical social theory, philosophy, political economy, literary theory, psychoanalysis, and mass culture. O’Neill was the author, editor, and translator of over 30 books and hundreds of articles, many of which have been translated into French, German, Japanese, and Mandarin. O’Neill's work focuses on the notion of corporeal knowledge and embodiment as mediated by familial relationships and social welfare. O’Neill was Distinguished Professor of Sociology at York University (Emeritus), where he also co-founded the Programme in Social and Political Thought in 1972. O'Neill was founder of the Communications and Culture Joint Programme at York and Ryerson University, Senior Scholar at the Laidlaw Foundations’ Children at Risk Programme and Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 1985. He was also co-editor of the ''International Quarterly, Philosophy of the Social Sciences'' and ''The Journal of Classical Sociology,'' and associate editor of ''Body & Society''. Michel de Montaigne,
Giambattista Vico Giambattista Vico (born Giovan Battista Vico ; ; 23 June 1668 – 23 January 1744) was an Italian philosopher, rhetorician, historian, and jurist during the Italian Enlightenment. He criticized the expansion and development of modern rationali ...
,
G. W. F. Hegel Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (; ; 27 August 1770 – 14 November 1831) was a German philosopher. He is one of the most important figures in German idealism and one of the founding figures of modern Western philosophy. His influence extends a ...
,
Karl Marx Karl Heinrich Marx (; 5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, sociologist, political theorist, journalist, critic of political economy, and socialist revolutionary. His best-known titles are the 1848 ...
,
Sigmund Freud Sigmund Freud ( , ; born Sigismund Schlomo Freud; 6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for evaluating and treating pathologies explained as originating in conflicts ...
,
Maurice Merleau-Ponty Maurice Jean Jacques Merleau-Ponty. (; 14 March 1908 – 3 May 1961) was a French phenomenological philosopher, strongly influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger. The constitution of meaning in human experience was his main interest an ...
, Herbert Marcuse, and Michel Foucault are among O’Neill’s many intellectual influences.


Education and academic career

O’Neill was born and raised in northwest London by Irish Catholic parents of working-class background with his younger sister Joan. O’Neill received a BA in sociology from the London School of Economics in 1955 where he immersed himself in classics of social and political theory from
Plato Plato ( ; grc-gre, Πλάτων ; 428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC) was a Greek philosopher born in Athens during the Classical period in Ancient Greece. He founded the Platonist school of thought and the Academy, the first institution ...
to L.T. Hobhouse. He received a Fulbright scholarship to the University of Notre Dame in Indiana where he completed his Master’s in political science in 1957. O’Neill then attended classes at Harvard for a semester where he was introduced to
Paul Sweezy Paul Marlor Sweezy (April 10, 1910 – February 27, 2004) was a Marxist economist, political activist, publisher, and founding editor of the long-running magazine ''Monthly Review''. He is best remembered for his contributions to economic theory ...
, an American Marxist and former Harvard professor. Sweezy suggested he pursue his PhD at Stanford where Sweezy’s friend
Paul Baran Paul Baran (born Pesach Baran ; April 29, 1926 – March 26, 2011) was a Polish-American engineer who was a pioneer in the development of computer networks. He was one of the two independent inventors of packet switching, which is today the dom ...
took on O’Neill as a student, and whose collected essays O'Neill would later edit and publish. After completing his PhD, O’Neill worked at York University in Toronto, where he had three children with his wife Maria (née Doerig). He dedicated several books to his children, Daniela, Gregory, and Brendan. In 1985, O’Neill married Susan Hallam with whom he hosted graduate classes and seminars in the dining room of their home for many years. His wife Susan was a support to O’Neill in his career, often typing and proofreading many of his manuscripts as he preferred to write by hand. Under Baran’s mentorship and during the early days of his career, O’Neill developed his own approach to the critique of Marxist scientism and Hegelian Marxist social theory. O’Neill’s main study upon completing his PhD was French phenomenological philosopher
Maurice Merleau-Ponty Maurice Jean Jacques Merleau-Ponty. (; 14 March 1908 – 3 May 1961) was a French phenomenological philosopher, strongly influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger. The constitution of meaning in human experience was his main interest an ...
. Publishing several translations of his texts, O'Neill extended Merleau-Ponty’s ideas on the body and Marxist philosophy and politics into a sociology of the body and a critical theory of the body politic.


Sociological and theoretical writings

In an autobiographical note O’Neill wrote in the early 2000s, he describes his research as being focused on
Frankfurt School The Frankfurt School (german: Frankfurter Schule) is a school of social theory and critical philosophy associated with the Institute for Social Research, at Goethe University Frankfurt in 1929. Founded in the Weimar Republic (1918–1933), dur ...
critical social theory and Continental
phenomenology Phenomenology may refer to: Art * Phenomenology (architecture), based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties Philosophy * Phenomenology (philosophy), a branch of philosophy which studies subjective experiences and a ...
. In both areas, he considers the problem of the complementarity between causal explanation and hermeneutical interpretation in emancipatory social science. He writes that his research on the sociology of embodiment anticipated basic problems in current women’s, race, and colonial studies and contributes to the work of media researchers and other scholars in the social sciences. O’Neill’s many books and essays address five main themes: the phenomenology and sociology of the body; the critique of Marxist scientism and postmodernism; a meta-psychoanalysis of textuality; a social theory of civic capitalism, child suffering and the welfare state; all these topics are informed by a critical theory of the body politic.


Phenomenology and sociology of the body

O’Neill’s study of the French phenomenological philosopher
Maurice Merleau-Ponty Maurice Jean Jacques Merleau-Ponty. (; 14 March 1908 – 3 May 1961) was a French phenomenological philosopher, strongly influenced by Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger. The constitution of meaning in human experience was his main interest an ...
led him to develop ideas on the social, productive, and political body. Inspired by the young
Karl Marx Karl Heinrich Marx (; 5 May 1818 – 14 March 1883) was a German philosopher, economist, historian, sociologist, political theorist, journalist, critic of political economy, and socialist revolutionary. His best-known titles are the 1848 ...
’s ideas on estrangement and alienation between the worker and world, O’Neill’s ''Sociology as a Skin Trade'' in (1972) outlines his theory of how corporate capitalism operates through bodies which are transformed into objects, commodities, and machines and thus given monetary value. O’Neill treats ‘skin trade’ as a dialectical concept to explore how, on the one hand, humans are connected through their physical contact in the world, and on the other hand, they are tied to systems of power that operate through capitalist violence. In later works, such as ''The Communicative Body'' (1989), where he also develops a theory of childhood development through the work of Jacques Lacan, O’Neill grounds his phenomenological ideas by emphasizing the corporeal body as the medium through which we engage with the world. By focusing on the body, and combining Continental and Anglo-American intellectual traditions, O’Neill critiques conceptions of sociology that interpret and explain actions in terms of abstract categories, including functionalist and postmodern theories.


Critique of Marxist scientism and postmodernism

In his career-long writings on Hegelian Marxist critical theory, including the essays collected in ''For Marx Against Althusser'' (1982), ''The Poverty of Postmodernism'' (1995), ''Plato’s Cave'' (1991, revised and republished in 2002), and the edited collection ''On Critical Theory'' (1976), O’Neill critiques the scientism that underwrites both
Marxism Marxism is a left-wing to far-left method of socioeconomic analysis that uses a materialist interpretation of historical development, better known as historical materialism, to understand class relations and social conflict and a dialectical ...
and postmodernism. In advancing a conception of what he calls 'Orphic Marxism', and through a reading of Herbert Marcuse and Michel Foucault, he argues that this ‘reformulation of Marxist humanism gives emphasis to its civility over its industrialism’. In contrast to the postmodernism of
Jean-François Lyotard Jean-François Lyotard (; ; ; 10 August 1924 – 21 April 1998) was a French philosopher, sociologist, and literary theorist. His interdisciplinary discourse spans such topics as epistemology and communication, the human body, modern art and ...
,
Fredric Jameson Fredric Jameson (born April 14, 1934) is an American literary critic, philosopher and Marxist political theorist. He is best known for his analysis of contemporary cultural trends, particularly his analysis of postmodernity and capitalism. Jam ...
, and others, whom he treats as having reduced to the sensory register of fleeting simulacra of endless desire, the human body should be considered 'the figure of a great civilizing narrative that cannot be separated from the equally humanizing figure of work’. By centring critical intelligence on the body, and by bridging emancipatory, analytical, and expressive ways of knowing, O’Neill examines how social alienation and inequality can be viewed as more or less a common experience. This style of research also means that the sociologist can never be removed from the subject of study, and is therefore not an alien observer but always a carnal, embodied thinker engaged with others.


Meta-psychoanalysis of textuality

Beginning with his book ''Essaying Montaigne: A Study of the Renaissance Institution of Writing and Reading'' (1982, revised and republished in 2001), O’Neill proposes a literary theory of writing and reading as corporeal conduct, here focusing on the textual practices and reception of Michel de Montaigne's ''Essays''. In the essays collected in ''Critical Conventions'' (1992) and ''Incorporating Cultural Theory'' (2002), which discuss such thinkers as
Roland Barthes Roland Gérard Barthes (; ; 12 November 1915 – 26 March 1980) was a French literary theorist, essayist, philosopher, critic, and semiotician. His work engaged in the analysis of a variety of sign systems, mainly derived from Western popula ...
and Jacques Derrida along with the fiction of
Italo Svevo Aron Hector Schmitz (19 December 186113 September 1928), better known by the pseudonym Italo Svevo (), was an Italian writer, businessman, novelist, playwright, and short story writer. A close friend of Irish novelist and poet James Joyce, Svevo ...
and
James Joyce James Augustine Aloysius Joyce (2 February 1882 – 13 January 1941) was an Irish novelist, poet, and literary critic. He contributed to the modernist avant-garde movement and is regarded as one of the most influential and important writers of ...
, among others, he broadens this approach to post-structuralist interpretation into a meta-psychoanalytic theory of what he calls 'homotextuality/gynesis' through a series of critical studies of the conventions of style and disciplinarity in the literary and social sciences. In his edited anthology ''Freud and the Passions'' (1996), and ''The Domestic Economy of the Soul'' (2011), based on yearly seminars O’Neill taught to graduate students over more than two decades, he conducts a lyrical meditation on
Sigmund Freud Sigmund Freud ( , ; born Sigismund Schlomo Freud; 6 May 1856 – 23 September 1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, a clinical method for evaluating and treating pathologies explained as originating in conflicts ...
’s famous five case histories and other writings. As Mark Featherstone and Thomas Kemple summarize O’Neill’s theory of the text in ''Writing the Body Politic'' (2020), the lessons students take away from these seminars is that 'we read and write books with our bodies in the course of a lifelong transaction, or semiosis’.


Civic capitalism and defence of the civic state

In several essays and two shorter books, ''The Missing Child in Liberal Theory'' (1994) and ''Civic Capitalism'' (2004), O’Neill advances a defence of the welfare state against liberal, neoliberal, and neoconservative critics who neglect structural inequalities and institutional solutions while arguing that the state has become a symbol of potential totalitarianism. Drawing on an alternative genealogy of social and political thought from
Giambattista Vico Giambattista Vico (born Giovan Battista Vico ; ; 23 June 1668 – 23 January 1744) was an Italian philosopher, rhetorician, historian, and jurist during the Italian Enlightenment. He criticized the expansion and development of modern rationali ...
to
Marcel Mauss Marcel Mauss (; 10 May 1872 – 10 February 1950) was a French sociologist and anthropologist known as the "father of French ethnology". The nephew of Émile Durkheim, Mauss, in his academic work, crossed the boundaries between sociology and ...
, and emphasizing a distinctively Canadian tradition of civic practice, O’Neill argues instead that the ‘civic state’ must foster giving, welfare, civic virtue, and collective care for the most vulnerable, especially children and future generations, as the core principles of any civilization committed to abandoning the barbaric ethics of individual greed. Without ignoring the lessons of Marxist theory and in part by displacing Eurocentric thought through critiques of the work of
Talcott Parsons Talcott Parsons (December 13, 1902 – May 8, 1979) was an American sociologist of the classical tradition, best known for his social action theory and structural functionalism. Parsons is considered one of the most influential figures in soci ...
, Hannah Arendt,
John Rawls John Bordley Rawls (; February 21, 1921 – November 24, 2002) was an American moral, legal and political philosopher in the liberal tradition. Rawls received both the Schock Prize for Logic and Philosophy and the National Humanities Medal in ...
, and Gilles Deleuze and
Félix Guattari Pierre-Félix Guattari ( , ; 30 April 1930 – 29 August 1992) was a French psychoanalyst, political philosopher, semiotician, social activist, and screenwriter. He co-founded schizoanalysis with Gilles Deleuze, and ecosophy with Arne Næs ...
, these later writings address urgent issues of childhood and family in the context of liberal-communitarianism by formulating a concept of what he calls ‘civic capitalism’.


Critical theory of the body politic

In their edited collection of mid-career and later writings in the ''O’Neill Reader'', O'Neill's former students Featherstone and Kemple note that he first formulated his theory of the body politic in response to the counter-cultural movements of the 1960s, which he revisited throughout his career, culminating in the four-part scheme he proposed in the second edition of ''Five Bodies'' (revised and republished in 2004). The figure of the body politic – articulated at the levels of the biological, productive, libidinal, and civic bodies – derives from the Christian, medieval, and Renaissance imagery of ‘the king’s two bodies’, one a physio-corporeal and the other a socio-institutional articulation of the polity itself. Extrapolating this scheme into our everyday experience of both the physical and communicative body, O’Neill's later work approaches the human sciences as the endless work of sense-making and critical reflection on current crises and contemporary problems.Maurice Roche, ‘On the Political Sociology of the Lifeworld: A Review of John O’Neill’s ''Five Bodies''’. ''Philosophy of the Social Sciences'' 18 (2): 1988: 259-63. Mark Featherstone and Thomas Kemple, 'Editors' Introduction: Writing and Reading the Body Politic', in ''Writing the Body Politic: A John O’Neill Reader''. Mark Featherstone and Thomas Kemple (eds.). London: Routledge, 2020, page xvi. For this reason, O’Neill’s focus on the body entails an effort to ground social theorists, readers, and sociologists in their experiences, perceptions, and embodied efforts to make sense of social life while remaking the cultural world.


Works


Books

*1970. ''Perception, Expression and History: The Social Phenomenology of Merleau-Ponty''. Evanston: Northwestern University Press (revised and reprinted in 1989 below). *1972. ''Sociology as a Skin Trade: Essays Towards a Reflexive Sociology''. London, Heinemann, and New York: Harper & Row. *1974. ''Making Sense Together: An Introduction to Wild Sociology''. London: Heinemann, and New York: Harper & Rowe (revised and reprinted in 1989 belos). *1982. ''For Marx Against Althusser, and Other Essays''. Washington, DC: Center for Advanced Research in Phenomenology and University Press of America. *1989. ''The Communicative Body: Studies in Communicative Philosophy, Politics and Sociology''. Evanston: Northwestern University Press (French translation 1995; Japanese translation 1992). *1992. ''Critical Conventions: Interpretation in the Literary Arts and Sciences''. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. *1994. ''The Missing Child in Liberal Theory: Towards a Covenant Theory of Family, Community, Welfare and the Civic State''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. *1995. ''The Poverty of Postmodernism''. London: Routledge. *2001. ''Essaying Montaigne: A Study of the Renaissance Institution of Writing and Reading''. Liverpool: The University of Liverpool Press (revised from 1982 edition with Routledge & Kegan Paul). *2002. ''Incorporating Cultural Theory: Maternity at the Millennium''. Albany: State University Press of New York. *2002. ''Plato’s Cave: Television and Its Discontents''. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press Inc. (revised from 1991 edition with Ablex Publishing Corporation). *2004. ''Civic Capitalism: The State of Childhood''. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. *2004. ''Five Bodies: Re-figuring Relationships''. London: Sage Publications (revised from 1985 edition with Cornell University Press; Chinese translation 1996; German translation 1989). *2011. ''The Domestic Economy of the Soul: Freud’s Five Case Histories''. London: Sage Publications (Chinese translation 2016). *2020. ''Writing the Body Politic: A John O’Neill Reader''. Mark Featherstone and Thomas Kemple (eds.). London: Routledge.


Selected articles, book chapters, and edited collections

*1963. ‘Alienation, Class Struggle and Marxian Anti-Politics’. ''The Review of Metaphysics'', XVII 3): 462–71. *1964. ‘The Concept of Estrangement in the Early and Later Writings of Karl Marx’. ''Philosophy and Phenomenological Research'', XXV (1): 64–84 (revised and reprinted in 1972a and 1982 above). *1969. ‘Translator’s Note’. In ''Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Humanism and Terror: An Essay on the Communist Problem''. John O’Neill (trans.) Boston: Beacon Press, pp. vii–xi. *1969. ‘Introduction: Marxism and the Sociological Imagination’. In Paul Baran, ''The Longer View: Essays Toward a Critique of Political Economy''. John O’Neill (ed.). New York: Monthly Review Press, pp. xiii–xvii. *1970. ‘Preface’ and ‘Introduction: Perception, Expression and History’. In ''Phenomenology, Language, and Society: Essays from Maurice Merleau-Ponty''. John O’Neill (ed.). London: Heinemann, pp. v–lxii (revised and reprinted in 1989). *1970. ‘Translator’s Preface’. In ''Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Themes from the Lectures at the Collège de France 1952–1960''. John O’Neill (trans., ed.). Evanston: Northwestern University Press, pp. xi–xvii. *1972. ‘Scientism, Historicism, and the Problem of Rationality’. In ''Modes of Individualism and Collectivism''. John O’Neill (ed.). London: Heinemann, pp. 3–26. *1973. ‘Hegel and Marx on History as Human History’. In Jean Hyppolite, ''Studies on Marx and Hegel''. John O’Neill (ed., trans.). New York: Harper Torchbooks, pp. xi–xx (earlier version in 1972; revised and reprinted in 1982). *1973. ‘On Simmel’s Sociological Apriorities’. In ''Phenomenological Sociology: Issues and Applications''. George Psathas (ed.). New York: Wiley, pp. 91–106 (earlier version in 1972). *1973. ‘Translator’s Introduction: Language and the Voice of Philosophy’. In ''Maurice Merleau-Ponty, The Prose of the World''. John O’Neill (trans.). Evanston: Northwestern University Press, pp. xxv–xlvi (revised and reprinted in 1989). *1974. ‘Philosophy and Revolution: A Review.’ ''Telos'', 22: 163–71. *1974. ‘Philosophical Speech and the Poetry of Review.’ ''Semiotica'', X (3): 288–91. *1975. ‘Gay Technology and the Body Politic’, pp. 291–302. In ''The Body as a Medium of Expression''. Jonathan Benthall and Ted Polhemus (eds.). London: Allen Lane. *1975. ‘Facts, Myths, and the Nationalist Platitude’. ''Canadian Journal of Sociology'', 1: 107–24. *1975. ‘Lecture Visuelle de l’Espace Urbain’. In ''Colloque d’Esthétique Appliquée á la Création du Paysage Urbain''. Paris: Copedith, pp. 235–44. *1976. ‘Time’s Body’. In ''Giambattista Vico’s Science of Humanity''. Giorgio Tagliacozzo, Donald Phillip Verene (eds.). Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 333–39 (earlier version in 1974a). *1976. ‘Critique and Remembrance’. In ''On Critical Theory''. John O’Neill (ed.). New York: Seabury Press; London: Heinemann, pp. 1–14. *1977. ‘When is Sociology Phenomenological?’ ''The Annals of Phenomenological Sociology'', II: 1–40. *1978. ‘Socratic Essay’. In ''What it Means to be Human''. Ross Fitzgerald (ed.). Oxford: Pergamon Press, pp. 25–43. *1978. ‘Mind and Institution’. In ''Interdisciplinary Phenomenology''. Don Ihde, Richard M. Zaner (eds.). The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, pp. 99–108. *1980. ‘From Phenomenology to Ethnomethodology: Some Radical Misreadings’. ''Current Perspectives in Sociological Theory'', 1: 7–20. *1981. ‘A Preface to Frame Analysis’. ''Human Studies'', 4: 359–64. *1981. ‘McLuhan’s Loss of Innis-Sense’. ''Canadian Forum'', LXI/709: 13–15. *1983. ‘Vico on the Natural Workings of the Mind’. ''Phenomenology and the Human Sciences'', Supplement to Philosophical Topics, 12: 117–25. *1983. ‘Naturalism in Vico and Marx: A Theory of the Body Politic’. In ''Vico and Marx: Affinities and Contrasts''. Giorgio Tagliacozzo (ed.). Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, pp. 277–89 (earlier version in 1982). *1983. ‘Reflection and Radical Finitude’. ''Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology'', 14: 17–22. *1985. ‘Phenomenological Sociology’. ''The Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology'', 22 (5): 748–70. *1985. ‘The Essay as a Moral Exercise: Montaigne’. ''Renaissance and Reformation'', 21 (3): 210–18. *1986. ‘Decolonization and the Ideal Speech Community: Some Issues in the Theory and Practice of Communicative Competence’. In ''Critical Theory and Public Life''. John Forester (ed.). Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 57–76. *1986. ‘To Kill the Future?’ In ''Environmental Ethics: Philosophical and Policy Perspectives''. Philip P. Hanson (ed.). Burnaby: Simon Fraser University Press, pp. 163–73. *1991. 'Introduction - The Fragmentation of Sociology'. Co-authored with Bryan Turner. ''Journal of Classical Sociology'' 1(1): 5-12. *1993. ‘McTopia: Eating Time’. In ''Utopias and The Millennium''. Krishan Kumar and Stephen Baum (eds.). London: Reaktion Books, pp. 129–37. *1994. ‘Two Body Criticism: A Genealogy of the Postmodern Anti-Aesthetic’. ''History and Theory'', 33 (1): 61–78. *1994. ‘Vico and Myth’. In ''The Imaginative Basis of Thought and Culture: Contemporary Perspectives on Giambattista Vico''. Marcel Danesi and Frank Nuessel (eds.). Toronto: Canadian Scholars Press, pp. 99–111. *1996. ‘Introduction: A Dialectical Genealogy of Self, Society, and Culture in and After Hegel’. In ''Hegel’s Dialectic of Desire and Recognition: Texts and Commentary''. John O’Neill (ed.). Albany: State University of New York Press, pp. 25–40. *1996. ‘The Question of an Introduction: Understanding and the Passion of Ignorance’. In ''Freud and the Passions''. John O’Neill (ed.). University Park: Penn State Press, pp. 1–11. *1996. 'Loi et genèse: Freud (ren)contre Schreber'. In ''Schreber et paranoïa: Le meutre de l'âme''. Luiz Eduardo Prado de Oliveira (ed.). Paris: L'Harmattan, pp. 135–148. *1997. ‘Is The Child A Political Subject?’ ''Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research'', 4 (2): 241–50. *1998. ‘Endless Knowledge’. ''Social Epistemology'', 12 (1): 79–84. *1998. ‘Civic Capital: Education and the National Economy’. In ''The New Higher Education: Issues and Directions for the Post-Dearing University''. David Jary and Martin Parker (eds.). Stoke-on-Trent: Staffordshire University Press, pp. 303–18. *1999. ‘Children and the Civic State: A Covenant Model of Welfare’. In ''Counselling and the Therapeutic State''. James J. Chriss (ed.). New York: Aldine De Gruyter, pp. 33–54. *1999. ‘Have You Had Your Theory Today?’ In ''Resisting McDonaldization''. Barry Smart (ed.). London: Sage Publications, pp. 41–56. *2001. ‘Horror Autotoxicus: The Dual Economy of Aids’. In ''Contested Bodies''. Ruth Holliday and John Hassard (eds.). London: Routledge, pp. 179–85.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:ONeill, John Canadian sociologists Phenomenologists 1933 births Academics from London Alumni of the London School of Economics University of Notre Dame alumni Stanford University alumni Academic staff of York University People from Hendon Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada 2022 deaths