Bültmann & Gerriets
A Passion for Society
How We Think about Human Suffering
von Arthur Kleinman, Iain Wilkinson
Verlag: University of California Press
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-520-28722-8
Erschienen am 26.01.2016
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 159 mm [H] x 237 mm [B] x 29 mm [T]
Gewicht: 636 Gramm
Umfang: 328 Seiten

Preis: 100,50 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung

"This is a wonderful book on an extremely important subject. The social causes of individual suffering--in company or in isolation--get the attention and probing investigation they demand, both as a contribution to epistemology and as pointers to ways and means of remedial action. This is a much awaited--and beautifully written--book which should make a huge difference to the sad and unjust world in which we live."--Amartya Sen, Professor of Economics and Philosophy at Harvard University

"A Passion for Society is a stirring rejection of the cult of dispassion in modern anthropology and sociology and a brisk rehabilitation of attempts to link fellow feeling to pragmatic (and, yes, humanitarian) efforts to lessen the suffering of others. This defense of caring and caregiving revives old lessons and offers new ones, burnishing the example of great social theorists and of almost forgotten ones. Wilkinson and Kleinman are not trying to win an argument, although they do, but rather to offer a hopeful and humane intellectual basis for what is, fundamentally and unapologetically, a moral stance: against indifference and cynicism and inaction, and for their opposites. This fierce book is both balm and compass."--Paul Farmer, MD, PhD, Harvard Medical School, Partners In Health, The Brigham and Women's Hospital

"The world is stuffed full of unbearable human misery. Every day billions of people in the world find themselves living in tragic desperation. What is to be done? How can a social science deal with this best? In this challenging, committed and original study, Iain Wilkinson and Arthur Kleinman provide a history and appreciation of the study of social suffering and urge us to place this at the heart of understanding society by putting compassion and practical care at its core. Critical of the formalism, distance, and coldness of both academic life and social science, the book creates new dialogues. It deserves to become a landmark in redirecting social science to work more passionately to make the world a kinder place."--Ken Plummer, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Essex University

"In their analysis of 'the problem of suffering, ' Wilkinson and Kleinman provide a thoroughly convincing argument for a new approach to social theory and social research practice--one that is compassionate, interventionist, and globally oriented, and thus better able to address the pressing issues that define our age." --Alan Petersen, Professor of Sociology, Monash University



Iain Wilkinson is Reader in Sociology at the School of Social Policy, Sociology, and Social Research at the University of Kent. He is author of Risk, Vulnerability and Everyday Life, Suffering: A Sociological Introduction, and Anxiety in a Risk Society.

Arthur Kleinman is a psychiatrist and Esther and Sidney Rabb Professor of Medical Anthropology and Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard University. He currently serves as Director of the Harvard University Asia Center. He is author of The Illness Narratives and What Really Matters, coauthor of Reimagining Global Health, and coeditor of Social Suffering, to name a few of the other books he has written or edited.


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