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Humanitarianism and Modern Culture (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,549
Discovery Miles 15 490
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Humanitarianism and Modern Culture (Hardcover)
Series: Essays on Human Rights
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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Humanitarianism and Modern Culture is a timely and fascinating book
which cuts across reportage of pop literary references to
illuminate our understanding of the role of popular culture in
shaping humanitarian discourse. --Ruti Teitel, Ernst C. Stiefel
Professor of Comparative Law, New York Law School. ""In all the
frenzy of celebrity humanitarianism, where famous idols call
attention to the world's suffering--and to themselves--Keith
Tester's trenchant book provides the critical eye necessary to
understand how Western culture exploits humanitarian crisis. In the
field of human rights today, there is a disturbing trend toward
making human rights another cause celebre, packaged for the
consumption of the world's fortunate consumers. How has the
commercialization and consumerization of human rights affected the
course of global emancipation from suffering? Tester's book
provides some unsettling but crucial answers."" --Thomas Cushman,
Wellesley College. It seems paradoxical that in the West the
predominant mode of expressing concern about suffering in the Third
World comes through participation in various forms of popular
culture--such as buying tickets to a rock concert like Live Aid in
1985--rather than through political action based on expert
knowledge. Keith Tester's aim in this book is to explore the
phenomenon of what he calls ""commonsense humanitarianism,"" the
reasons for its hegemony as the principal way for people in the
West to relate to distant suffering, and its ramifications for our
moral and social lives. As a remnant of the West's past imperial
legacy, this phenomenon is most clearly manifested in humanitarian
activities directed at Africa, and that continent is the
geographical focus of this critical sociology of humanitarianism,
which places the role of media at the center of its analysis.
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