Op werkdagen voor 23:00 besteld, morgen in huis Gratis verzending vanaf €20

Sociocide - Reflections on Today's Wars

Paperback Engels 2022 1e druk 9781793623867
Verwachte levertijd ongeveer 13 werkdagen

Samenvatting

Wars have a destructive impact on society. The violence in the first case is domicide, in the second urbicide, in the third genocide, and in the fourth, the book introduces a neologism, sociocide, the killing of society. Through the lens of this neologism, Keith Doubt provides persuasive evidence of the social, political, and human consequences of today's wars in countries such as Bosnia and Iraq.

Sociocide: Reflections on Today's Wars rigorously formulates, develops, and applies the notion of sociocide as a Weberian ideal type to contemporary wars. Drawing upon sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and literature, Doubt analyzes war crimes, scapegoating, and torture and concludes by examining capitalism in the face of the coronavirus pandemic as a sociocidal force. Embedded in the humanistic tradition and informed by empirical science, this book provides a clear conceptual account of today's wars, one that is objective and moral, critical and humanistic.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9781793623867
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:paperback
Aantal pagina's:100
Druk:1
Verschijningsdatum:15-5-2022
Jongbloed:Oorlogsrecht

Lezersrecensies

Wees de eerste die een lezersrecensie schrijft!

Inhoudsopgave

1. On Sociocide
2. Sociocide and the US Invasion of Iraq
3. The Ethical Requirement of Burial, Humanity, and its Transgression: Classical Anthropology Applied
4. The Iron Cage of Surreality: A Foucaultian Critique of the Dayton Accords
5. Social Order Without Scapegoating: A Critique of René Girard
6. The Reality of Torture and Sociocide
7. The Lure of the Pariah: Hannah Arendt, W. E. B. DuBois, and Franz Fanon
8. The Spirit of Capitalism in the Face of the Coronavirus Pandemic
9. How an Apology Works: Exit from Sociocide

Managementboek Top 100

Rubrieken

Populaire producten

    Personen

      Trefwoorden

        Sociocide - Reflections on Today's Wars