Description

Book Synopsis
* A major new book on the present-day forms of evil D terrorism, violence, racism and hatred. * Rather than treating evil as a supernatural force or a religious issue, Wieviorka analyses it from a sociological point of view, showing how these various forms of evil are constituted in day-to-day life.

Trade Review
'Wieviorka lays out the case for thinking of "evil" as "social", as opposed to theological … A work to facilitate discussion.'
Review 31

'In this provocative and insightful book, Michel Wieviorka puts evil onto the agenda for the social sciences. He does this not by appealing to forces outside social life but by situating evil as an issue in social life. It is part of culturally informed understanding, sometimes directly linked to religion and sometimes not. And to ignore it in the name of objectivism is to lose touch with the world we inhabit.'
Craig Calhoun, New York University

'Michel Wieviorka thinks about evil without theology. Contemporary evil is social, Wieviorka contends, and he explains how social pathologies, no matter how heinous, must be explained in sociological ways. When unequal or repressive social structures undermine conditions for autonomy, evil actions provide opportunities for restoring the experience, no matter how illusory, of meaning and control. To fight evil we must create social justice - that is the message of this leading French sociologist today.'
Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University

'By reintroducing evil into social theory, Michel Wieviorka has undermined the indifference to human well-being that fed on its absence. By pulling on the thread of our universal liability to suffer he unravels the traditions of Marxist anti-humanism, Bourdieu's elimination of the Subject, and Foucault's "death of Man". Wieviorka is right to redirect us beyond the banality of evil and towards the conditions necessary for the global human Subject to thrive.'
Margaret Archer, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne



Table of Contents
FOREWORD
CHAPTER 1 Facing Evil. A sociological perspective
CHAPTER 2 An End to Violence
CHAPTER 3 Global Terrorism
CHAPTER 4 The Return of Racism
CHAPTER 5 The New Arena of the Social Sciences or, How to Raise the Level of Generalization.
PART 1 The Critique of the Subject
PART 2 Thinking Globally

Evil

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    A Paperback / softback by Michel Wieviorka

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      View other formats and editions of Evil by Michel Wieviorka

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 04/05/2012
      ISBN13: 9780745653938, 978-0745653938
      ISBN10: 0745653936

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      * A major new book on the present-day forms of evil D terrorism, violence, racism and hatred. * Rather than treating evil as a supernatural force or a religious issue, Wieviorka analyses it from a sociological point of view, showing how these various forms of evil are constituted in day-to-day life.

      Trade Review
      'Wieviorka lays out the case for thinking of "evil" as "social", as opposed to theological … A work to facilitate discussion.'
      Review 31

      'In this provocative and insightful book, Michel Wieviorka puts evil onto the agenda for the social sciences. He does this not by appealing to forces outside social life but by situating evil as an issue in social life. It is part of culturally informed understanding, sometimes directly linked to religion and sometimes not. And to ignore it in the name of objectivism is to lose touch with the world we inhabit.'
      Craig Calhoun, New York University

      'Michel Wieviorka thinks about evil without theology. Contemporary evil is social, Wieviorka contends, and he explains how social pathologies, no matter how heinous, must be explained in sociological ways. When unequal or repressive social structures undermine conditions for autonomy, evil actions provide opportunities for restoring the experience, no matter how illusory, of meaning and control. To fight evil we must create social justice - that is the message of this leading French sociologist today.'
      Jeffrey C. Alexander, Yale University

      'By reintroducing evil into social theory, Michel Wieviorka has undermined the indifference to human well-being that fed on its absence. By pulling on the thread of our universal liability to suffer he unravels the traditions of Marxist anti-humanism, Bourdieu's elimination of the Subject, and Foucault's "death of Man". Wieviorka is right to redirect us beyond the banality of evil and towards the conditions necessary for the global human Subject to thrive.'
      Margaret Archer, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne



      Table of Contents
      FOREWORD
      CHAPTER 1 Facing Evil. A sociological perspective
      CHAPTER 2 An End to Violence
      CHAPTER 3 Global Terrorism
      CHAPTER 4 The Return of Racism
      CHAPTER 5 The New Arena of the Social Sciences or, How to Raise the Level of Generalization.
      PART 1 The Critique of the Subject
      PART 2 Thinking Globally

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