Troubled Identity and the Modern World

Troubled Identity and the Modern World
Author: Leonidas Donskis
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2009
Genre: Cultural awareness
ISBN: 1349374423

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The book maps what Leonidas Donskis terms the troubled identity, that is, the identity that constantly needs assurance and confirmation. It is on why and how the search for identity becomes everything for a postmodern person, an identity builder and shifter. Our infatuation with it replaces the former search for the meaning of life, becoming a mode of discourse, self-discovery, self-interpretation, and a perfect chance to reshape ourselves as the other in our country. Identity protects and hurts us. Through an identity-building-and-shifting process, argues Donskis, we can move from political majority to cultural minority, or the other way around.

Troubled Identity and the Modern World

Troubled Identity and the Modern World
Author: L. Donskis
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2009-05-25
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780230621732

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The book maps what Leonidas Donskis terms 'the troubled identity', that is, the identity that constantly needs assurance and confirmation. Through an identity-building-and-shifting process, argues Donskis, we can move from political majority to cultural minority, or the other way around.

Institutional Selves

Institutional Selves
Author: Jaber F. Gubrium,James A. Holstein
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2001
Genre: Ego (Psychology)
ISBN: UOM:39015050121196

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Institutions large and small, in all sectors, virtually instruct us about who and what we are as part of the work they do in processing lives and personal troubles. This book addresses the institutional construction of troubled selves.

The Politics and Ethics of Identity

The Politics and Ethics of Identity
Author: Richard Ned Lebow
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 445
Release: 2012-08-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107027657

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Challenges the notion of consistent unitary identities, arguing that we are multiple, changing selves, shaped by social contexts and processes.

An Analysis of Judith Butler s Gender Trouble

An Analysis of Judith Butler s Gender Trouble
Author: Tim Smith-Laing
Publsiher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 81
Release: 2017-07-05
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781351352277

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Judith Butler's Gender Trouble is a perfect example of creative thinking. The book redefines feminism's struggle against patriarchy as part of a much broader issue: the damaging effects of all our assumptions about gender and identity. Looking at the factionalism of contemporary (1980s) feminism, Butler saw a movement split by identity politics. Riven by arguments over what it meant to be a women, over sexuality, and over class and race, feminism was falling prey to internal problems of identity, and was failing to move towards broader solidarity with other liberation movements such as LGBT. Butler turned these issues on their head by questioning the basis that supposedly fundamental and fixed identities such as 'masculine/feminine' or 'straight/gay' actually have. Tracing these binary definitions back to the binary nature of human anatomy ('male/female'), she argues that there is no necessary link between our anatomies and our identities. Subjecting a wide range of evidence from philosophy, cultural theory, anthropology, psychology and anthropology to a renewed search for meaning, Butler shows both that sex (biology) and gender (identity) are separate, and that even biological sex is not simplistically either/or male/female. Separating our biology from identity then allows her to argue that, while categories such as 'masculine/feminine/straight/gay' are real, they are not necessary; rather, they are the product of society's assumptions, and the constant reproduction of those assumptions by everyone around us. That opens up some small hope for change: a hope that – 25 years after Gender Trouble's publication – is having a huge impact on societies and politics across the world.

SAGE Internet Research Methods

SAGE Internet Research Methods
Author: Jason Hughes
Publsiher: SAGE
Total Pages: 1681
Release: 2012-06-25
Genre: Reference
ISBN: 9781446275931

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Historically, social researchers have shown a willingness to exploit new technologies to enhance, facilitate and support their various activities. However, arguably no other technological development has influenced the landscape of social research as rapidly and fundamentally as the Internet. This collection avoids both uncritical embrace and wholesale dismissal by considering some of the key literature in the field of Internet research methods. Volume One: Core Issues, Debates and Controversies in Internet Research introduces themes and issues that run across all four volumes such as: epistemology, ontology and methodology in the online world; access, social divisions and the ′digital divide′; and the ethics of online research. Volume Two: Taking Research Online - Internet Survey and Sampling addresses the range of resources, digital archives and Internet-based data sources that exist online from relatively straightforward and practical guides to such material through to more polemical pieces which consider problems relating to the use, access and analysis of online data and resources. Volume Three: Taking Research Online - Qualitative Approaches considers the broad range of approaches to conducting researching via or ′in′ the Internet. The focus is on conventional methods that have been ′taken online′, and which in doing so, have become transformed in scope and character. Volume Four: Research ′On′ and ′In′ the Internet - Investigating the Online World follows logically from that which precedes it in exploring how social research has been ′taken online′, not simply through the deployment of existing methods and techniques via the Internet, but in researchers′ increasing recognition and investigation of the online world as a sphere of human interaction - a socio-cultural arena to be explored ′from the desktop′ as it were.

Modernity in Crisis

Modernity in Crisis
Author: L. Donskis
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2011-08-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780230339194

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A blend of political theory, social theory, and philosophy of culture, the book will show the relationship and tension between thought and action, politics and literature, power and dissent in modern politics and culture.

Identity Trouble

Identity Trouble
Author: C. Caldas-Coulthard,R. Iedema
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2016-01-08
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780230593329

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Identity Trouble assembles contributions from a variety of discourse fields to discuss the pressures on traditional understandings of identity. The focus is on failures and uncertainties in people's construction of their identities when faced change and the contributors raise critical questions about identity and how it may be reconfigured.