Satisfaction Not Guaranteed – Dilemmas of Progress in Modern Society
Autor Peter N. Stearnsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 apr 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814783627
ISBN-10: 0814783627
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 163 x 234 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Wiley
ISBN-10: 0814783627
Pagini: 280
Dimensiuni: 163 x 234 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Wiley
Recenzii
"Satisfaction Not Guaranteed impresses on many levels. First, despite the fact that it is explaining why Americans arent happy, the book isnt at all depressing. Second, Stearns doesnt oversimplify.... Stearns looks at the history of consumption and discusses issues such as boredom, product innovation, and changes in shopping venues." Catherine Ramsdell, PopMatters.com, August 8th 2012
"The book is dry but interestingly nuanced, encouraging us to see our flawed modernity as a "work in progress". In Victorian times, Stearns relates, "Nervous middle-class people now learned that having sex too often, possibly more than once a week, could induce premature death or insanity." One hopes that at least they yawned a lot. - Steven Poole, The Guardian, September 21st 2012 "A masterful introduction to a new kind of history, one that looks to the past to illuminate the most basic aspects of contemporary behaviour, from parenting practices and consumer behaviour to the rise of the hospice and the growing acceptance of oral sex. This is one of those seminal books that radically transforms the way we look at the present and the past." Steven Mintz, John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History, University of Houston and author of Huck's Raft
"As always, Peter Stearns stimulates our thinking about history and human experience in important ways. The essays Stearns has collected for this volume are unconventional, provocative, and compelling, covering a wide range of topics including how we parent, consume, die, make love, and use our sense of smell. This collection gives new vigor to the study of social history because it is very brave and very interesting." Joan Jacobs Brumberg, Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow and Professor, Cornell University
Peter Stearns and his intrepid co-conspirators do not, like other seekers of truth in history, try to understand the past in its own terms. Instead, they try to learn from the past to touch the present and affect the future. One after another, their extraordinary essays suggest that their audacious ambition may be attainable. Michael Zuckerman, University of Pennsylvania
"Essays on human happiness usually focus on individual feelings and contemporary life. Peter Stearns makes happiness a historical question, using analytic moves he has developed through a series of studies. He emphasizes the social context of human feeling and connects the present to the last 250 years in Europe and the United States, the historical era of 'modernity.' He uses impressive erudition to unearth striking examples and a conversational tone to suggest relevant generalizations. Written with wit and careful balance, his essay becomes a gentle guide to historical understanding of our times and of happiness in America." Raymond Grew, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan
"Satisfaction Not Guaranteed impresses on many levels. First, despite the fact that it is explaining why Americans aren't happy, the book isn't at all depressing. Second, Stearns doesn't oversimplify... Stearns looks at the history of consumption and discusses issues such as boredom, product innovation, and changes in shopping venues." Catherine Ramsdell, PopMatters.com, August 8th 2012 "The book is dry but interestingly nuanced, encouraging us to see our flawed modernity as a "work in progress". In Victorian times, Stearns relates, "Nervous middle-class people now learned that having sex too often, possibly more than once a week, could induce premature death or insanity." One hopes that at least they yawned a lot." - Steven Poole, The Guardian, September 21st 2012 "A masterful introduction to a new kind of history, one that looks to the past to illuminate the most basic aspects of contemporary behaviour, from parenting practices and consumer behaviour to the rise of the hospice and the growing acceptance of oral sex. This is one of those seminal books that radically transforms the way we look at the present and the past." Steven Mintz, John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History, University of Houston and author of Huck's Raft "As always, Peter Stearns stimulates our thinking about history and human experience in important ways. The essays Stearns has collected for this volume are unconventional, provocative, and compelling, covering a wide range of topics including how we parent, consume, die, make love, and use our sense of smell. This collection gives new vigor to the study of social history because it is very brave and very interesting." Joan Jacobs Brumberg, Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow and Professor, Cornell University "Peter Stearns and his intrepid co-conspirators do not, like other seekers of truth in history, try to understand the past in its own terms. Instead, they try to learn from the past to touch the present and affect the future. One after another, their extraordinary essays suggest that their audacious ambition may be attainable." Michael Zuckerman, University of Pennsylvania "Essays on human happiness usually focus on individual feelings and contemporary life. Peter Stearns makes happiness a historical question, using analytic moves he has developed through a series of studies. He emphasizes the social context of human feeling and connects the present to the last 250 years in Europe and the United States, the historical era of 'modernity.' He uses impressive erudition to unearth striking examples and a conversational tone to suggest relevant generalizations. Written with wit and careful balance, his essay becomes a gentle guide to historical understanding of our times and of happiness in America." Raymond Grew, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan
"The book is dry but interestingly nuanced, encouraging us to see our flawed modernity as a "work in progress". In Victorian times, Stearns relates, "Nervous middle-class people now learned that having sex too often, possibly more than once a week, could induce premature death or insanity." One hopes that at least they yawned a lot. - Steven Poole, The Guardian, September 21st 2012 "A masterful introduction to a new kind of history, one that looks to the past to illuminate the most basic aspects of contemporary behaviour, from parenting practices and consumer behaviour to the rise of the hospice and the growing acceptance of oral sex. This is one of those seminal books that radically transforms the way we look at the present and the past." Steven Mintz, John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History, University of Houston and author of Huck's Raft
"As always, Peter Stearns stimulates our thinking about history and human experience in important ways. The essays Stearns has collected for this volume are unconventional, provocative, and compelling, covering a wide range of topics including how we parent, consume, die, make love, and use our sense of smell. This collection gives new vigor to the study of social history because it is very brave and very interesting." Joan Jacobs Brumberg, Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow and Professor, Cornell University
Peter Stearns and his intrepid co-conspirators do not, like other seekers of truth in history, try to understand the past in its own terms. Instead, they try to learn from the past to touch the present and affect the future. One after another, their extraordinary essays suggest that their audacious ambition may be attainable. Michael Zuckerman, University of Pennsylvania
"Essays on human happiness usually focus on individual feelings and contemporary life. Peter Stearns makes happiness a historical question, using analytic moves he has developed through a series of studies. He emphasizes the social context of human feeling and connects the present to the last 250 years in Europe and the United States, the historical era of 'modernity.' He uses impressive erudition to unearth striking examples and a conversational tone to suggest relevant generalizations. Written with wit and careful balance, his essay becomes a gentle guide to historical understanding of our times and of happiness in America." Raymond Grew, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan
"Satisfaction Not Guaranteed impresses on many levels. First, despite the fact that it is explaining why Americans aren't happy, the book isn't at all depressing. Second, Stearns doesn't oversimplify... Stearns looks at the history of consumption and discusses issues such as boredom, product innovation, and changes in shopping venues." Catherine Ramsdell, PopMatters.com, August 8th 2012 "The book is dry but interestingly nuanced, encouraging us to see our flawed modernity as a "work in progress". In Victorian times, Stearns relates, "Nervous middle-class people now learned that having sex too often, possibly more than once a week, could induce premature death or insanity." One hopes that at least they yawned a lot." - Steven Poole, The Guardian, September 21st 2012 "A masterful introduction to a new kind of history, one that looks to the past to illuminate the most basic aspects of contemporary behaviour, from parenting practices and consumer behaviour to the rise of the hospice and the growing acceptance of oral sex. This is one of those seminal books that radically transforms the way we look at the present and the past." Steven Mintz, John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History, University of Houston and author of Huck's Raft "As always, Peter Stearns stimulates our thinking about history and human experience in important ways. The essays Stearns has collected for this volume are unconventional, provocative, and compelling, covering a wide range of topics including how we parent, consume, die, make love, and use our sense of smell. This collection gives new vigor to the study of social history because it is very brave and very interesting." Joan Jacobs Brumberg, Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow and Professor, Cornell University "Peter Stearns and his intrepid co-conspirators do not, like other seekers of truth in history, try to understand the past in its own terms. Instead, they try to learn from the past to touch the present and affect the future. One after another, their extraordinary essays suggest that their audacious ambition may be attainable." Michael Zuckerman, University of Pennsylvania "Essays on human happiness usually focus on individual feelings and contemporary life. Peter Stearns makes happiness a historical question, using analytic moves he has developed through a series of studies. He emphasizes the social context of human feeling and connects the present to the last 250 years in Europe and the United States, the historical era of 'modernity.' He uses impressive erudition to unearth striking examples and a conversational tone to suggest relevant generalizations. Written with wit and careful balance, his essay becomes a gentle guide to historical understanding of our times and of happiness in America." Raymond Grew, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Michigan
Notă biografică
Descriere
A historian of emotions re-examines our modern-day pursuit of happiness