Is Shame Necessary?: New Uses for an Old Tool
Autor Jennifer Jacqueten Limba Engleză CD-Audio – 4 ian 2016
An urgent, illuminating exploration of the social nature of shame, and of the ways in which it might be used, sparingly and pointedly, to promote political change and social reform.
In cultures that champion the individual, guilt is advertised as the cornerstone of conscience. Yet while guilt holds individuals to personal standards, it proves impotent in the face of corrupt corporate policies. In recent years, we have been asked to assuage our guilt about these problems as consumers, by buying organic foods or fair trade products, for example. Yet, unless nearly everyone participates, the impact of individual consumer consciousness is microscopic. Jennifer Jacquet persuasively argues that the solution to the limitations of guilt can be found in shame, retrofitted for the age of democracy and social media. She demonstrates how shaming can function as a nonviolent form of resistance that, in turn, challenges institutions, organizations, and even governments to actuate large-scale change. She argues that when applied in the right way, the right quantity, and at the right time, shame has the capacity to keep us from failing other species in life's fabric and, ultimately, ourselves.
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 1511361492
Dimensiuni: 135 x 170 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.07 kg
Editura: Brilliance Audio
Recenzii
Intelligent and provocative... The prospect of shame is a powerful social corrective
Thoughtful and measured
Shaming is society's natural stabilizer and organic risk-management mechanism, and one that is ignored in modernity, particularly in the virtual world. Worse: it has been largely ignored by researchers before Jennifer Jacquet, whose book gives us an insightful treatment of a vital topic
This is a wonderful, important and timely book. It shows us that the glue that really holds society together is not laws and diktats but honour and shame