WORK
The Practice of Everyday Life
De
Certeau's 1980 masterwork analyzing how ordinary people navigate systems designed by others—the foundational text of strategies vs. tactics, poaching, bricolage, and the creativity of use. The single most influential book on everyday resistance.
L'invention du quotidien (1980), translated as
The Practice of Everyday Life (1984), is Michel de Certeau's most widely read and most influential work. It introduced the framework of strategies and tactics, the concepts of poaching and
la perruque, the space-place distinction, and the insistence that ordinary people are not passive consumers of
culture but active, creative practitioners who transform the systems they inhabit through the quality of their use. The book's two volumes analyze walking, reading, cooking, speaking, and dwelling—practices so ordinary that theory had overlooked them. De Certeau demonstrated that these practices are
creative: they produce meanings, routes, meals, and lives that the systems designed to contain them cannot fully anticipate or control. The work synthesizes history, theology, psychoanalysis, linguistics, and ethnographic observation into a framework that has reshaped cultural studies, urban theory, media studies, and the analysis of everyday resistance.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book emerged from de Certeau's participation in