Precarity and Loss

On Certain and Uncertain Properties of Life and Work

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Sociology, Marriage & Family
Cover of the book Precarity and Loss by Tadeusz Rachwał, Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Tadeusz Rachwał ISBN: 9783658134150
Publisher: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden Publication: November 7, 2016
Imprint: Springer VS Language: English
Author: Tadeusz Rachwał
ISBN: 9783658134150
Publisher: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden
Publication: November 7, 2016
Imprint: Springer VS
Language: English

The book is devoted to social and political interdependencies of life and work, the interdependencies in which the ideas of loss and deprivation are the founding incentives of the precariousness of the position and the status of the human subject. Loss of property in the economic sense, along with the loss of properties in epistemological terms have become a crucial measure of precarity through its dissociation from what Judith Butler calls “the organization and protection of bodily needs.” The book offers a proposition of multidisciplinary reading of origins and constructions of “anxiety of loss” as a constitutive trait of what may be called the “economization” (or, after Jean-Pierre Dupuy, “economystifacion”) of human condition through various discursive practices tying loss with lack, and in this way making the uncertainty of possessing certain properties into a sphere of politically controlled semi-ontological anxieties. The book also reads loss in terms of topographical disorientation and the idea of placelessness.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The book is devoted to social and political interdependencies of life and work, the interdependencies in which the ideas of loss and deprivation are the founding incentives of the precariousness of the position and the status of the human subject. Loss of property in the economic sense, along with the loss of properties in epistemological terms have become a crucial measure of precarity through its dissociation from what Judith Butler calls “the organization and protection of bodily needs.” The book offers a proposition of multidisciplinary reading of origins and constructions of “anxiety of loss” as a constitutive trait of what may be called the “economization” (or, after Jean-Pierre Dupuy, “economystifacion”) of human condition through various discursive practices tying loss with lack, and in this way making the uncertainty of possessing certain properties into a sphere of politically controlled semi-ontological anxieties. The book also reads loss in terms of topographical disorientation and the idea of placelessness.

More books from Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden

Cover of the book Lean Startup in Konzernen und Mittelstandsunternehmen by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Scheitern - Organisations- und wirtschaftssoziologische Analysen by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Praxisorientiertes Online-Marketing by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Antrieb by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Innovationsorientiertes IT-Management mit DevOps by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Social Media für Journalisten by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Praxiswissen Schwingungsmesstechnik by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Unternehmenserfolg in den USA by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Reputationsmanagement by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Praxishandbuch Wirtschaftsmediation by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Produktionslogistik/Produktionssteuerung kompakt by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Die Außenpolitik der USA by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Reifegradmanagement im Einkauf by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Das Online-Marketing-Cockpit by Tadeusz Rachwał
Cover of the book Die DIN EN ISO 9001:2015 verstehen by Tadeusz Rachwał
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy