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The anxiety over death persists in everyday life- though often
denied or repressed- lingering as an unconscious worry or intuition
that typically seems to compromise one's feelings of well-being and
experience in a range of areas; coming out often as malaise,
depression, and anger in much conduct. If one accepts the cliche
that life is preparation for death, we must accept that the lived
experience of the dying body is not highlighted merely in obvious
cases of deterioration such as in the ageing or diseased body, but
in everyday life as a normal phenomenon. This book proposes that
sensitivity to this dimension can empower us to develop creative
relationships to the vulnerability of others and to ourselves as
well. Part One lays the groundwork for a study of the ways the aura
and fear of death recurs as a constant premonition in life and how
people try to deal with this uneasiness. Part Two then goes on to
apply this focus to particular concerns and problems such as
dementia, depression, aging, retirement, and a range of anxieties,
frustrations and aggressions. The Dying Body as Lived Experience
will be of interest to a wide interdisciplinary audience in the
health sciences, in the sociology of health and illness,
philosophy, bioethics and in the expanding field of medical
humanities.
Beginning with a focus on the ethical foundations of caregiving in
health and expanding towards problems of ethics and justice
implicated in a range of issues, this book develops and expands the
notion of care itself and its connection to practice. Organised
around the themes of culture as a restraint on caregiving in
different social contexts and situations, innovative methods in
healthcare, and the way in which culture works to position care as
part of a rhetorical approach to dependency, responsibility, and
justice, The Ethics of Care presents case studies examining
institutional responses to end-of-life issues, the notion of
informed consent, biomedicine, indigenous rights and
postcolonialism in care and theoretical approaches to the concept
of care. Offering discussions from a variety of disciplinary
approaches, including sociology, communication, and social theory,
as well as hermeneutics, phenomenology, and deconstruction, this
book will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with
interests in healthcare, medicine, justice and the question of how
we think about care as a notion and social form, and how this is
related to practice.
The anxiety over death persists in everyday life- though often
denied or repressed- lingering as an unconscious worry or intuition
that typically seems to compromise one's feelings of well-being and
experience in a range of areas; coming out often as malaise,
depression, and anger in much conduct. If one accepts the cliche
that life is preparation for death, we must accept that the lived
experience of the dying body is not highlighted merely in obvious
cases of deterioration such as in the ageing or diseased body, but
in everyday life as a normal phenomenon. This book proposes that
sensitivity to this dimension can empower us to develop creative
relationships to the vulnerability of others and to ourselves as
well. Part One lays the groundwork for a study of the ways the aura
and fear of death recurs as a constant premonition in life and how
people try to deal with this uneasiness. Part Two then goes on to
apply this focus to particular concerns and problems such as
dementia, depression, aging, retirement, and a range of anxieties,
frustrations and aggressions. The Dying Body as Lived Experience
will be of interest to a wide interdisciplinary audience in the
health sciences, in the sociology of health and illness,
philosophy, bioethics and in the expanding field of medical
humanities.
Most discussions of health care center on medical advances,
cost, and the roles of insurers and government agencies. With "The
Grey Zone of Health and Illness," Alan Blum offers a new
perspective, outlining a highly nuanced theoretical approach to
health and health care alike. Drawing on a range of thinkers, Blum
explains how our current understanding of health care tends to
posit it as a sort of state of permanent emergency, like the
nuclear standoff of the Cold War. To move beyond that, he argues,
will require a complete rethinking of health and sickness,
self-governance and negligence. A heady, cutting-edge intervention
in a critical area of society, "The Grey Zone of Health and Illness
"will have wide ramifications in the academy and beyond.
Redirecting examinations of the culture of the city away from its
customs, art, and amenities to focus on the mental life of modern
society, Alan Blum explores the methods cities and their subjects
use to find meaning in the context of urban life, in particular the
city’s relationships to social change and what has traditionally
been identified as justice. The Material City pictures the city as
a landscape of diverse clashes over beliefs, a site that exhibits
interpretive collisions over globalization, gentrification,
innovation, preservation, market value, popular culture, crowds,
consumption, urban governance, and different strategies for healing
the democratic city’s ever-present conflicts over these concerns.
Each chapter uses a problem of urban life to observe and analyze
assumptions and values that are typically taken for granted and
unspoken, using elements of the philosophy of Plato as well as the
work of modern thinkers such as Georg Simmel, Gertrude Stein,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, Virginia Woolf, Hannah Arendt, and Jacques
Lacan. The Material City translates contested views of everyday
life and its management into a deeper reflection on urbanity as a
system of desire. The historical and the contemporary metropolis
alike are shown to be sites where the enigma of mortality – and
its relation to pleasure, comedy, and fate – plays out.
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