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Love and Justice as Competences [Kietas viršelis]

4.22/5 (18 ratings by Goodreads)
(École des hautes etudes en sciences sociales, Paris)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 328 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 236x158x32 mm, weight: 637 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Jun-2012
  • Leidėjas: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745649092
  • ISBN-13: 9780745649092
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 328 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 236x158x32 mm, weight: 637 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 22-Jun-2012
  • Leidėjas: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 0745649092
  • ISBN-13: 9780745649092
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

People care a great deal about justice. They protest and engage in confrontations with others when their sense of justice is affronted or disturbed. When they do this, they don’t generally act in a strategic or calculating way but use arguments that claim a general validity. Disputes are commonly regulated by these ‘regimes of justice’ implicit in everyday social life. But justice is not the only regime that governs action. There are some actions that are selfless and gratuitous, and that belong to what might be called a regime of ‘peace’ or ‘love’. In the course of their everyday lives, people constantly move back and forth between these two regimes, that of justice and that of love. And everyone also has the capacity for violence, which arises when the regulation of action within either of these regimes breaks down.

In Love and Justice as Competences, Boltanski lays out this highly original framework for analysing the action of individuals as they pursue their day-to-day lives. The framework outlined in this important book is the basis for the path-breaking work that he has developed over the last twenty years – work that has examined the moral foundations of society in and through the forms of everyday conflict. For anyone who wants to understand what a critical sociology might mean today, this book is an essential text.

Recenzijos

'When an injustice is committed, most of us simmer in anger and indignation and feel compelled to denounce the perpetrators. Yet, despite its widespread character, the actual social and emotional experience of injustice has hardly been studied. This book is the first major sociological study of denunciation, that most ordinary act present in personal and public life. Boltanski is the leading sociologist of his generation, and this book's virtuosity shows why.' Eva Illouz, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Acknowledgements vii
Foreword ix
Part I What People Can Do
1 A Sociology of Disputes
3(8)
2 The Political Basis for General Forms
11(7)
3 Ordinary Denunciations and Critical Sociology
18(10)
4 The Sociology of Critical Society
28(8)
5 A Model of Competence for Judgement
36(10)
6 Principles of Equivalence and Justifiable Proofs
46(13)
7 Tests and Temporality
59(9)
8 Four Modes of Action
68(11)
9 Below the Threshold of the Report
79(10)
Part II Agape: An Introduction to the States of Peace
10 Disputes and Peace
89(15)
10.1 The limits of justice
89(5)
10.2 Anthropology and tradition
94(6)
10.3 The theological tradition
100(4)
11 Three Forms of Love
104(25)
11.1 An initial inventory
104(1)
11.2 Love as reciprocity: philia
105(1)
11.3 Eros and the construction of general equivalence
106(4)
11.4 Agape and the withdrawal of equivalence
110(4)
11.5 The insouciance of agape
114(2)
11.6 Duration and permanence
116(4)
11.7 The example of Little Flowers
120(5)
11.8 Parable and metaphor
125(4)
12 Agape and the Social Sciences
129(16)
12.1 Agape: practical model, ideal or Utopia?
129(2)
12.2 Marx and the theory of justice
131(7)
12.3 The paradoxes of gifts and counter-gifts
138(7)
13 Towards a Sociology of Agape
145(24)
13.1 The model of pure agape
145(5)
13.2 Access to the states of agape
150(3)
13.3 From love to justice
153(3)
13.4 From justice to love
156(3)
13.5 Agape and emotion
159(10)
Part III Public Denunciation
14 The Affair as a Social Form
169(9)
15 The Actantial System of Denunciation
178(13)
16 The Requirement of Desingularization
191(8)
17 The Difficult Denunciation of Kith and Kin
199(8)
18 Manoeuvring to Increase One's own Stature
207(13)
19 What Not to Do by Oneself
220(9)
20 Generalization and Singularity
229(10)
21 Dignity Offended
239(14)
22 Confidence Betrayed
253(6)
Appendix 1 Building the Factorial Analysis 259(3)
Appendix 2 A Sampling of Typical Letters 262(10)
Notes 272(42)
References 314(13)
Index 327
Luc Boltanski is Professor of Sociology at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Paris