Theories of alienation had a long history, burgeoned since the 1960s,
yet almost disappeared in recent decades – but in his book,
Christoph Henning brings these theories back on the agenda, to better
account for contemporary social pathologies. Feelings of estrangement,
of not feeling at home in the world, in one’s own body or
surroundings, are widespread in contemporary societies. They go hand
in hand with loneliness, with a burnout, with depression or with anger
and hatred. But where do they come from, what do they signify? Henning
tracks theories of alienation from three different traditions: first,
a conservative approach from Rousseau to Hartmut Rosa explains
alienation with change and is based on nostalgia; second, a liberal
approach from Simmel to Rahel Jaeggi relies on individual autonomy and
explains it as a loss of control; and third, an Aristotelian approach
from Humboldt to Marx or British idealism, based on theories of
flourishing, relies on a perfectionist anthropology and critical
social theory. In doing so, Henning vividly reconstructs these
traditions with contemporary examples and excursions into the movies.
Theories of Alienation: From Rousseau to the Present shines important
new light on this important field of contemporary social philosophy
and is very approachable to the general reader.
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From Rousseau to the Present
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040108550
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter