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Description

The Evolution of Alienation: Trauma, Promise and the Millennium presents a collection of essays that examine the prevalence of alienation in the contemporary world. Although the authors share a critical approach to society, their views of alienation vary. While some feel that alienation is inescapable under the conditions of late modernity, others see that especially at this time there are opportunities to overcome alienation. Testing their approaches, the authors touch on highly diverse domains of life. The book is divided into four sections, each with a focus on how alienation is produced and, perhaps, overcome. Part I presents theoretical approaches to 'shifting views of alienation'. Here the authors discuss how alienation is disclosed in social science, in technology, and in biological constructions of the human being. Part II deals with political consequences of alienation. The three chapters focus on how alienation can lead to fascist beliefs, how it functions in the development of authoritarian personalities, and how alienation is disclosed in teen-age violence, but also in the justice meted out to desperate teens, without compassion. Part III includes examinations of 'alienation in identity, culture, and religion'. Here, researchers discuss how the alienating conditions of globalization create alienated identities that are carnivalized in shock music and in exploitative television shows. The last chapter of this section sees in these developments evidence of our inability or unwillingness as social scientists to deal with transcendental values. Part IV focuses on phenomena from everyday life, showing how alienation undermines the advantages of community, and the intimacies of dialogue. Although the very concern with alienation shows awareness of trauma, there are, throughout the book, hints of promise - in technology, in loving and creative domesticity, in activism and through grass-roots initiatives in education. Through an interest in the cosmos human being may yet discover the way out of alienating labyrinths.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Does Alienation Have a Future? Recapturing the Core of Critical Theory
Chapter 3 New Technologies and Alienation: Some Critical Reflections
Chapter 4 Embodiment and Communication: Alienation, Genetics, and Computing. What Does It Mean to Be Human?
Chapter 5 Authority Fetishism and the Manichaean Vision: Stigma, Stereotyping, and Charisma as Keys to Pseudo-Orientation in an Estranged Society
Chapter 6 When Alienation Turns Right: Populist Conspiracism, the Apocalyptic Style, and Neo-Fascist Movements
Chapter 7 Lonely Privilege in Despair: Aiming for Unfeigned Hope
Chapter 8 Globalization, Alienation, and Identity: A Critical Approach
Chapter 9 Alienation Incorporated: "F-- the Mainstream Music" in the Mainstream
Chapter 10 The Final Indignity: The Commodification of Alienation
Chapter 11 Alienation and the Cosmos
Chapter 12 Alienated Communities: Between Aloneness and Connectedness
Chapter 13 Loving Alienation: The Contradictions of Domestic Work
Chapter 14 "Plain Talk": Producing and Reproducing Alienation

Product details

Published Dec 08 2005
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 332
ISBN 9780742518346
Imprint Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Dimensions 234 x 180 mm
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Lauren Langman

Anthology Editor

Devorah Kalekin-Fishman

Contributor

Chip Berlet

Contributor

Harry F. Dahms

Contributor

Matthew David

Contributor

Rick Gibson

Contributor

Martha Gimenez

Contributor

Karen Halnon

Contributor

Douglas Kellner

Contributor

Lauren Langman

Contributor

Douglas Porpora

Contributor

Marvin Prosono

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