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The Politics of Being Mortal (Paperback)
Loot Price: R532
Discovery Miles 5 320
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The Politics of Being Mortal (Paperback)
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Loot Price R532
Discovery Miles 5 320
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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While much has been written in recent years on death and dying,
there has been little treatment of how people cope with death in
the absence of religious belief, and virtually no examination of
the potential political repercussions of a wider acceptance of
mortality in American society. Alfred Killilea's strikingly
original book revolves around a central irony: though the subject
of death has been largely shunned in American culture lest it rob
life of meaning and contentment, confronting death may be crucial
to enable us as individuals and as a society to affirm life, even
to survive, in this nuclear age. Killilea argues that the denial of
death has fostered a disavowal of limits in general, and that a
greater awareness of our mortality would provide a much needed
catalyst for change in our political response to narcissism and
nuclearism. He traces how, from John Locke to the present, a
politics and an economics based on growth for the sake of growth
have required an avoidance of human vulnerability. Our
confrontation with mortality, Killilea argues, would goad us to
question our roles as mere acquirers and to take more seriously the
need for equality and community in our society. In charting how we
can come to terms with death and how profoundly our attitudes
toward death affect our attitudes toward politics, Killilea vides
lucid and authoritative commentaries on such provocative thinkers
as Earnest Becker, Robert Jay Lifton, Michael Novak, Daniel Bell,
Christopher Lasch, and Jonathan Schell. Scholars in many fields as
well as interested lay readers will find the treatment of these
issues and thinkers compelling. This easily accessible book is an
urgent reminder that the most valuable spur to the examined life
extolled by Socrates is the knowledge that we will die.
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