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Theorizing power / by Jonathan Hearn.

Por: Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: Houndmills, Basingstoke ; New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan, 2012Descripción: xii, 251 páginas : ilustracionesTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • no mediado
Tipo de soporte:
  • volumen
ISBN:
  • 0230246567
  • 0230246575
  • 9780230246560
  • 9780230246577
Tema(s): Clasificación CDD:
  • 303.3 H436t 2012
Contenidos:
10. identity and personhood: -- Introduction -- Shifting discourses of power and social identity -- A problem of knowledge? -- An ecological model of identity -- Conclusion -- 11. Conclusion: To and over, is and ought: -- Introduction -- A useful concept -- Stories about power -- A qualified ´ought´.
Foucault: power/knowledge -- Actor-networks, ´realrationalität!´ and the ghost of Machiavelli -- Bourdieu: the practice histories -- On language and culture -- Conclusion -- 6. Evolutionary approaches: -- Introduction -- Energy, technology and evolution -- Two philosophic histories -- Modes, forms and sources of power -- Conclusion -- Part III. Investigating power: -- 7. Domination, authority and legitimacy in liberal society: -- Introduction -- State, economy, and the ´memorable alliance´ -- Civil society -- Public and private -- Competition as legitimation -- Conclusion -- 8. Religion and morality: -- introduction -- Human limits and explanations of religion -- Religion as reflecting the social constitution of power relations -- Relations as a medium of power struggles -- Meaning eclipses power -- Power and morality -- Conclusion -- 9. Gender, power and patriarchy: -- Introduction -- Comparative perspectives -- Public, private and patriarchy -- Feminism and power -- Conclusion --^
Part I. Conceptualizing power: -- 1. Introducing key issues: -- Introduction -- Physical versus social power -- Power ´to´ versus power ´over´ -- Asymmetrical versus balanced power -- Power as structures versus agents -- Actual versus potential power -- Conclusion -- 2. Meet the family- domination, authority and legitimacy: -- Introduction -- The ´dominant´ academic discourse on power -- Bringing authority and legitimacy back in -- Max Weber´s complicated legacy -- Recapitulation -- Part II. Theorizing power: -- 3. European sources: -- Introduction -- Early modern harbingers: Machiavelli and Hobbes -- Theorists of modernity: Marx, Durkheim and Weber -- Return to Italy: classical elitism and Gramsci -- Conclusion -- 4. American debates: -- Introduction -- Power: community structures and national elites -- The power of positive function -- Power hides its face -- Conclusion -- 5. Epistemological approaches: -- Introduction -- Barnes: self-fulfulling prophecies --^
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Existencias
Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Colección Signatura topográfica Estado Notas Fecha de vencimiento Código de barras Reserva de ítems
Reserva Libro Biblioteca Central Reserva Colección General 303.3 H436t 2012 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) Disponible GEN 33409002872616
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Incluye bibliografía.

10. identity and personhood: -- Introduction -- Shifting discourses of power and social identity -- A problem of knowledge? -- An ecological model of identity -- Conclusion -- 11. Conclusion: To and over, is and ought: -- Introduction -- A useful concept -- Stories about power -- A qualified ´ought´.

Foucault: power/knowledge -- Actor-networks, ´realrationalität!´ and the ghost of Machiavelli -- Bourdieu: the practice histories -- On language and culture -- Conclusion -- 6. Evolutionary approaches: -- Introduction -- Energy, technology and evolution -- Two philosophic histories -- Modes, forms and sources of power -- Conclusion -- Part III. Investigating power: -- 7. Domination, authority and legitimacy in liberal society: -- Introduction -- State, economy, and the ´memorable alliance´ -- Civil society -- Public and private -- Competition as legitimation -- Conclusion -- 8. Religion and morality: -- introduction -- Human limits and explanations of religion -- Religion as reflecting the social constitution of power relations -- Relations as a medium of power struggles -- Meaning eclipses power -- Power and morality -- Conclusion -- 9. Gender, power and patriarchy: -- Introduction -- Comparative perspectives -- Public, private and patriarchy -- Feminism and power -- Conclusion --^

Part I. Conceptualizing power: -- 1. Introducing key issues: -- Introduction -- Physical versus social power -- Power ´to´ versus power ´over´ -- Asymmetrical versus balanced power -- Power as structures versus agents -- Actual versus potential power -- Conclusion -- 2. Meet the family- domination, authority and legitimacy: -- Introduction -- The ´dominant´ academic discourse on power -- Bringing authority and legitimacy back in -- Max Weber´s complicated legacy -- Recapitulation -- Part II. Theorizing power: -- 3. European sources: -- Introduction -- Early modern harbingers: Machiavelli and Hobbes -- Theorists of modernity: Marx, Durkheim and Weber -- Return to Italy: classical elitism and Gramsci -- Conclusion -- 4. American debates: -- Introduction -- Power: community structures and national elites -- The power of positive function -- Power hides its face -- Conclusion -- 5. Epistemological approaches: -- Introduction -- Barnes: self-fulfulling prophecies --^

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