Description

Book Synopsis
Instead of considering society as a social environment, Society in the Self begins from the assumption that society works in the deepest regions of self and identity, as expressed in phenomena like self-sabotage, self-radicalization, self-cure, self-government, self-nationalization, and self-internationalization. This leads to the central thesis that a democratic society can only function properly if it is populated by participants with a democratically organized self. In this book, an integrative model is presented that is inspired by three versions of democracy: cosmopolitan, deliberative, and agonistic democracy, with the latter focusing on the role of social power and emotions.Drawing on these democratic views, three levels of inclusiveness are distinguished in the self: personal (I as an individual), social (I as a member of a group), and global (I as a human being). A democratic self requires the flexibility of moving up and down across these levels of inclusiveness and has to fi

Trade Review
Perhaps the most daring self-theorist working today, Hubert Hermans offers another creative gem that crosses academic boundaries and blurs traditional divisions among social and behavioral scientists. In proposing a theory of the democratic functioning of the self, Hermans takes us beyond his Dialogical Self Theory to show how a dynamic process of internal dialogue is inescapably liked to the democratic organization of society at large. Society in the Self will surely stimulate novel thinking, provoke new research, and incite fresh interpretations of the foundation of democracy itself. * Peter L. Callero, Professor of Sociology, Western Oregon University *
Society in the Self is the latest advancement in the Dialogical Self theory that has been created by one of the most innovative social scientists of the recent decades: Hubert Hermans. This book extends the original system of the multi-voiced processes that take place in the human individual Self to the operation of societies, with the specific focus on how democratic societies function. This is very much needed in our present time when we often become involved in fighting for democracy in societies other than our own, not analyzing the complex processes by which our own democratic systems function. This book fills in the gap, and introduces a new way of analyzing societies as dynamic systems in their deep dialogical tensions and occasional ruptures. * Jaan Valsiner, Niels Bohr Professor of Cultural Psychology, Aalborg University, Denmark *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction: The Democratic Organization of Self and Identity Chapter 1. The Dynamics of Society-in-the-Self Chapter 2. Positioning and Democracy in the Self Chapter 3. Positioning and Democracy in Teams and Organizations Chapter 4. The Positioning Brain Chapter 5. Social and Societal Over-Positioning: The Emergence of I-Prisons Chapter 6. Heterogenizing and Enriching the Self Chapter 7. Dialogue as Generative Form of Positioning Chapter 8: Dialogical democracy in a boundary-crossing world: Practical implications Glossary

Society in the Self

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    A Hardback by Hubert J.M. Hermans

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      View other formats and editions of Society in the Self by Hubert J.M. Hermans

      Publisher: Oxford University Press
      Publication Date: 4/26/2018 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780190687793, 978-0190687793
      ISBN10: 0190687797
      Also in:
      Sociology

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Instead of considering society as a social environment, Society in the Self begins from the assumption that society works in the deepest regions of self and identity, as expressed in phenomena like self-sabotage, self-radicalization, self-cure, self-government, self-nationalization, and self-internationalization. This leads to the central thesis that a democratic society can only function properly if it is populated by participants with a democratically organized self. In this book, an integrative model is presented that is inspired by three versions of democracy: cosmopolitan, deliberative, and agonistic democracy, with the latter focusing on the role of social power and emotions.Drawing on these democratic views, three levels of inclusiveness are distinguished in the self: personal (I as an individual), social (I as a member of a group), and global (I as a human being). A democratic self requires the flexibility of moving up and down across these levels of inclusiveness and has to fi

      Trade Review
      Perhaps the most daring self-theorist working today, Hubert Hermans offers another creative gem that crosses academic boundaries and blurs traditional divisions among social and behavioral scientists. In proposing a theory of the democratic functioning of the self, Hermans takes us beyond his Dialogical Self Theory to show how a dynamic process of internal dialogue is inescapably liked to the democratic organization of society at large. Society in the Self will surely stimulate novel thinking, provoke new research, and incite fresh interpretations of the foundation of democracy itself. * Peter L. Callero, Professor of Sociology, Western Oregon University *
      Society in the Self is the latest advancement in the Dialogical Self theory that has been created by one of the most innovative social scientists of the recent decades: Hubert Hermans. This book extends the original system of the multi-voiced processes that take place in the human individual Self to the operation of societies, with the specific focus on how democratic societies function. This is very much needed in our present time when we often become involved in fighting for democracy in societies other than our own, not analyzing the complex processes by which our own democratic systems function. This book fills in the gap, and introduces a new way of analyzing societies as dynamic systems in their deep dialogical tensions and occasional ruptures. * Jaan Valsiner, Niels Bohr Professor of Cultural Psychology, Aalborg University, Denmark *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction: The Democratic Organization of Self and Identity Chapter 1. The Dynamics of Society-in-the-Self Chapter 2. Positioning and Democracy in the Self Chapter 3. Positioning and Democracy in Teams and Organizations Chapter 4. The Positioning Brain Chapter 5. Social and Societal Over-Positioning: The Emergence of I-Prisons Chapter 6. Heterogenizing and Enriching the Self Chapter 7. Dialogue as Generative Form of Positioning Chapter 8: Dialogical democracy in a boundary-crossing world: Practical implications Glossary

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