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This major study develops a new account of modernity and its relation to the self. Building upon the ideas set out in The Consequences of Modernity, Giddens argues that 'high' or 'late' modernity is a post traditional order characterised by a developed institutional reflexivity. In the current period, the globalising tendencies of modern institutions are accompanied by a transformation of day-to-day social life having profound implications for personal activities. The self becomes a 'reflexive project', sustained through a revisable narrative of self identity. The reflexive project of the self, the author seeks to show, is a form of control or mastery which parallels the overall orientation of modern institutions towards 'colonising the future'. Yet it also helps promote tendencies which place that orientation radically in question - and which provide the substance of a new political agenda for late modernity.
In this book Giddens concerns himself with themes he has often been accused of unduly neglecting, including especially the psychology of self and self-identity. The volumes are a decisive step in the development of his thinking, and will be essential reading for students and professionals in the areas of social and political theory, sociology, human geography and social psychology.
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From the Back Cover
The author argues that 'high' or 'late' modernity is a post-traditional order characterized by a developed institutional reflexivity. In the current period, the globalizing tendencies of modern institutions are accompanied by a transformation of day-to-day social life having profound implications for personal activities. --This text refers to the paperback edition.
Review
'This book supplies the missing psychological link in Anthony Giddens' ever more substantial body of work on the sociology of modernity ... rich and measured ... His dialectical approach, moreover, affords many insights into the interconnection between the invasive and disorienting effects of commercial and technical imperatives.' New Statesman and Society
From the Inside Flap
Modernity differs from all preceding forms of social order because of its dynamism, its deep undercutting of traditional habits and customs, and its global impact. It also radicallly alters the general nature of daily life and the most personal aspects of human activity. In fact, one of the most distinctive features of modernity is the increasing interconnection between globalizing influences and personal dispositions. The author analyzes the nature of this interconnection and provides a conceptual vocabulary for it, in the process providing a major rethinking of the nature of modernity and a reworking of basic premises of sociological analysis.
Building on the ideas set out in the authors The Consequences of Modernity
, this book focuses on the self and the emergence of new mechanisms of self-identity that are shaped by—yet also shape—the institutions of modernity. The author argues that the self is not a passive entity, determined by external influences. Rather, in forging their self-identities, no matter how local their contexts of action, individuals contribute to and directly promote social influences that are global in their consequences and implications.
The author sketches the contours of the he calls “high modernity”—the world of our day—and considers its ramifications for the self and self-identity. In this context, he analyzes the meaning to the self of such concepts as trust, fate, risk, and security and goes on the examine the “sequestration of experience,” the process by which high modernity separates day-to-day social life from a variety of experiences and broad issues of morality. The author demonstrates how personal meaninglessness—the feeling that life has nothing worthwhile to offer—becomes a fundamental psychic problem in circumstances of high modernity. The book concludes with a discussion of “life politics,” a politics of selfactualization operating on both the individual and collective levels.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Product details
ASIN : B00DSLHOGG
Publisher : Polity; 1st edition (April 29, 2013)
Publication date : April 29, 2013
Language : English
File size : 834 KB
Text-to-Speech : Enabled
Screen Reader : Supported
Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
X-Ray : Not Enabled
Word Wise : Enabled
Print length : 268 pages
Page numbers source ISBN : 0804719446
Lending : Not Enabled
Best Sellers Rank: #735,116 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
#3,470 in Sociology (Kindle Store)
#20,955 in Sociology (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.7 out of 5 stars 35 ratings
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Biography
Anthony Giddens, Baron Giddens (born 18 January 1938) is a British sociologist who is known for his theory of structuration and his holistic view of modern societies. He is considered to be one of the most prominent modern sociologists, the author of at least 34 books, published in at least 29 languages, issuing on average more than one book every year. In 2007, Giddens was listed as the fifth most-referenced author of books in the humanities.
Three notable stages can be identified in his academic life. The first one involved outlining a new vision of what sociology is, presenting a theoretical and methodological understanding of that field, based on a critical reinterpretation of the classics. His major publications of that era include Capitalism and Modern Social Theory (1971) and The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies (1973). In the second stage Giddens developed the theory of structuration, an analysis of agency and structure, in which primacy is granted to neither. His works of that period, such as New Rules of Sociological Method (1976), Central Problems in Social Theory (1979) and The Constitution of Society (1984), brought him international fame on the sociological arena.
The most recent stage concerns modernity, globalisation and politics, especially the impact of modernity on social and personal life. This stage is reflected by his critique of postmodernity, and discussions of a new "utopian-realist" third way in politics, visible in the Consequences of Modernity (1990), Modernity and Self-Identity (1991), The Transformation of Intimacy (1992), Beyond Left and Right (1994) and The Third Way: The Renewal of Social Democracy (1998). Giddens' ambition is both to recast social theory and to re-examine our understanding of the development and trajectory of modernity.
Giddens served as Director of the London School of Economics 1997–2003, where he is now Emeritus Professor at the Department of Sociology.
Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Photo by Szusi [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons.
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Ambi
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2018
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V. May
4.0 out of 5 stars Purchased for a college course
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2015
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I had to purchase this for a introductory sociology course. Although the substance of the book is interesting, it was a rather difficult read. I had to look things over several times and ask for clarifications from the professor before I really understood. I believe that taking a sociology course provided me with the knowledge to appreciate the material that I otherwise would not have fully grasped on my own.
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Marra
4.0 out of 5 stars Good
Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2014
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There were some makings from the previous owner but it actually helped me. I received the product like new.
The texts are easily readable and even though it didn't have pictures, it's an attractive book.
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Orli
4.0 out of 5 stars it's fine
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2013
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The book is what I wanted and I arrived very quickly, but only after the arrival I saw it has some marks and notes inside (it was also written the in book description - I guess I didn't check carefully). can't complain, but it bothered me anyway.
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nader taghizadeh
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2016
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Good book
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August
5.0 out of 5 stars gr8
Reviewed in the United States on February 5, 2014
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This was a great read. A good story. Yay. Gr8. I just need this for my soc. class. Yes. Ok.
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Andrew D. Oram
4.0 out of 5 stars A thoughtful analysis with a moral and call to action
Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2009
I found this very useful to my own understanding of trends and potential in modern times, and I recommend the book for its positive-minded, constructive approach to today's problems. Giddens accepts many of the commonly understand aspects of life today--our reliance of large, abstract systems we don't understand, our risk of losing our individual identities in these systems, the expanded role of the state in our lives, and so on--which is why I assign only four stars to this book instead of five.
Giddens is an optimist, as well as a very capable writer. His book proceeds in a well-planned series of steps from basic principles of modern life to the power we can still exert as individuals and as social movements. (The text becomes easier to read as you go along, I've found.)
The threat of global warming hangs over the text, and its relevance is even clearer now, 18 years after the book was published. Furthermore, I think Giddens assumes that certain movements, such as therapy and woman's liberation, have gone further and reached more of the population than they really have. But the book's message of possibilities persists, and goads us on to moral action.
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6 people found this helpful
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Henri Edward Dongieux
5.0 out of 5 stars A lucid and engaging synthesis
Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2001
This book is indeed a work of social science, and not a work of formal logic, dialectic, or philosophy. And as such, it seeks to avoid the subject-object aporias and non-explanatory vocabulary of "postmodernism" so fashionable in some academic circles in favor of an integrated model of the self and society that not only makes sense, but resonates with the modern reader and social scientist in a way not easily dismissable by concerns of validity claims. Phenomenology, it must be noted, is less than a water-tight system of defendable truth-claims; postmodernism in its extreme denies the notion of objective knowledge altogether. This book has different aims.
The strength of Giddens' work has always been his identification of reflexivity as the central mechanism behind social and psychological transformations - the nested critique of society that sets up progressively complex turnovers in psyche and structure, one on the heels of the other, institutionalizing doubt as a central feature of existential and social life. Giddens makes clear that "postmodernity" is a meaningless term for his purposes; instead he takes the more sensible route (alongside contemporaries such as the brilliant Scott Lash) and employs the term "high modernity" to describe the present times as of the same conceputal order (albeit much more "intense" in critical ways) than preceding centuries. He compares and contrasts the self and the other, the mechanics of disembedding and reimbedding, the dynamics of intensionality and extensionality, and the twin states of trust and risk in a way that convincingly demonstrates that modernity is a game whose time is not yet up - and whose textures social science is capable of elegantly describing, and possibly even explaining. Giddens' theory of the "pure relationship" and his related analyses of self-society relationships are extremely important theoretically to many areas of the social sciences, including nation-state theory, globalization, development ethnography, refugee studies, and cultural studies. His work is even beginning to exert an influence on parallel disciplines as well, for example discourse analysis.
So, while the philosopher might dismiss this work as dependent on the truth-claims of modern psychology, the sociologist (at whatever level of expertise) will find this to be an engaging, challenging, and clearly written work with far-ranging application to empirical social-scientific material.
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Jo Cursley
5.0 out of 5 stars invaluable reference book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 11, 2014
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This book with its exploration of identity was clearly written and was very useful as reference for my thesis. It arrived promptly and in very good condition.
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anita propser
5.0 out of 5 stars Good book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 29, 2018
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Good read
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Joy
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 8, 2015
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Item was as described :)
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Isadora
5.0 out of 5 stars This book made sense of my life! (& helped me to get a great grade in my Masters)
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 10, 2011
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I couldn't be more surprised by the other review. Giddens is at his absolute best in this book. It is packed full of amazing theories which make sense of your whole life. I used it for my Masters and found it not just informative but one of the most enjoyable books I have read. I still quote from it in all kinds of different contexts.
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Reader
5.0 out of 5 stars Modernity and Send identity
Reviewed in Canada on February 19, 2017
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Eccellent academic source book
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Michael
Sep 14, 2019Michael rated it it was ok
I found this book extremely annoying.
We can start with some good points. Giddens states, forcefully and clearly, a set of propositions about the 'modern self'. It is a familiar picture for anyone familiar with the literature. If you've read Charles Taylor's Sources of the Self, Lionel Trilling's Sincerity and Authenticity, or Nancy Armstrong's Desire and Domestic Fiction, for example, you will already have encountered the notion that individuality, personality, privacy etc. are hallmarks of modern culture. What Giddens adds to this tradition is a focus on everyday life in Westernised countries today. His approach is systematic. He tries to list all the 'tribulations of the self' we regularly encounter, all the factors that lead to 'existential anxiety', all the systems that lead to the 'sequestration of experience'.
What he does not do, it is sad to say, is defend his conception of 'modernity'. The book is full of extremely frustrating arguments about how 'modern' differs from 'pre-modern' life, where Giddens describes the 'pre-modern' way of doing things in a single sentence, and provides neither evidence nor argument to justify his interpretation of the first 400,000 years of human existence. He expresses absolute certainty that 'modern' life is fundamentally different in character from all the 'pre-modern' life that preceded it, and yet makes no attempt at all to deal with the extreme diversity of 'pre-modern' ways of doing things. How can gardeners from the highlands of New Guinea, herdsmen of the Serengeti, the urbanised farmers of ancient Mesopotamia and the igloo-builders of Siberia seriously all be dumped into the single bucket of the 'pre-modern'?
Perhaps I am overly harsh. Giddens does occasionally reference a famous ethnographer or historian, and there may be a great deal of erudition lurking behind the self-confident prose. But one does suspect that his viewpoint is irremediably Eurocentric. On the odd occasion when he does indulge in some historical detail to substantiate his points, his examples are all European, and they are either quite superficial or just plain wrong. It is not the case, for example, that 'most historians agree that autobiographies (as well as biographies) only developed during the modern period'. What was St Augustine doing when he wrote his Confessions in 397AD, if not writing his autobiography? If the Buddhacharita is not a biography of the Buddha, then what exactly is it? Perhaps there are answers to such questions. Perhaps what Giddens really meant is the a new kind of 'modern' biography emerged in Europe over the last 200-300 years. But if this is what he meant, he should have said so, and he should have explained it.
Now if Giddens' understanding of European history is superficial, his knowledge of Asian, African, American and Oceanic history is apparently non-existent. If he had engaged with world history in the book, he would have had to revise several of his claims. One of his crucial claims, for instance, is that modernity is characterised by the 'pure relationship'. In modernity, our sexual relations are determined by free choice. We select a partner because we want to live with them, not because it fulfills some social obligation to marry someone of a particular kin-group or because an authority-figure has instructed us to do so. (In this we differ greatly from our poor 'pre-modern' forebears.) This kind of 'pure relationship' changes the meaning of sex. Sex is now a pure form of 'intimacy'. In fact, there really was no such thing as 'intimacy' before modernity, because sex always had a public and social character.
What rot.
Anyone who has read a single sūfī devotional poem or a classic of Sanskrit erotic verse who know full well that 'intimacy', privacy and the joys of sex have been valued for their own sake in many times and places. In fact, 'intimacy' was so valued by sūfī and Sanskrit poets of antiquity and the middle ages that it came to symbolise the individual's relationship with God. Now to give Giddens his due, it is probably fair to say that St Augustine inaugurated 1,500 years of prudery in Western culture, and that in the modern West intimacy has been revalued. But if he wanted to make this argument he should have done so.
It could be objected that I have focused on the wrong aspect of the book. The book is really a book about what it is like to be an individual today in the West, not a world history explaining the development of 'modernity'. Taken this way, it has a lot of merits, primarily as a kind of textbook that summarises the common sense of Anglo-American liberalism in the 1990s. But on the very first page, Giddens claims that it is not only a few societies he wishes to examine, nor will he focus only on one historical moment. It is 'modernity' as a whole that he sets out to describe, and unfortunately he makes very few of the comparisons necessary to distinguish what is 'modern' from what is not.
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Benediktas
Jul 16, 2013Benediktas rated it really liked it
Some vague chapters without clear purpose or meaning but an impressive work in general, emphasizing and analyzing moral and political issues of late-modernity/neocapitalist society in a convincing, positive manner. Sociology, psychology and philosophy are combined in a search for an understanding of various aspects of self-identity (risk, mediation, reflexivity...) specific to our times - that leads to quite a complex vocabulary but also rewards with insights into possibilities of fruitful transdisciplinary research. For those who don't have the time or patience to read through the whole book, I would recommend the parts on pure relationship, narcissism and sequestration which I found to be the most original and thought-provoking. (less)
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loafingcactus
Aug 31, 2014loafingcactus rated it really liked it
Shelves: available-at-unc, checked-out-2014, read-2014, sociology
The author has a brilliant concept of society, this I will not argue. In life one is offered many solutions to modern life with little analysis or background, such as the solution of spending more time in nature. And I have heard a counter-argument to that solution which suggests that because nature is amoral it decreases the moral good of those exposed to it rather than increases it. Without directly addressing that argument, the author makes an exceptionally good argument in this book for why connections with nature are a good counterpoint to the difficulties of modernity. Essentially, modernity turns everything inward such that it is only self-referential. Nature, in its inability to be controlled, cannot be pulled into those reflexive structures. Consequently exposure to nature can present a non-reflexive reality to a person who has been trained to only exist reflexively. And there’s more where that came from.
So that’s the good. It is considerable and you would be better off for having read the book. I took 25 pages of notes. Now for the bad: The author is known for churning out book after book and if this book is any example of the self-indulgence involved then one need not wonder how he does it. The shortcomings in scholarship are particularly irksome in the present environment where publishers claim to have a purpose as quality control. If this is all they can do, Stanford University Press has no purpose in being. By far the most egregious example of poor scholarship is a citation of Kafka which is a secondary citation. This is an author who surely can assign a grad student to go find the proper citation for him but he just doesn’t even bother, and the publisher let him get away with it.
But wait, there’s more. The author cites hardly any other works or facts. It’s simply him and his wisdom having a little solipsistic party. Two entire chapters of the book are written as analysis of other books which were picked just because. One chapter is on the genre of self-actualization self-help books, written as an analysis of a randomly selected book. Again, given the availability of unlimited grad students one would expect the author to select some particular book for some particular reason. Raffle off a Twinkie for the best reason. Having some reason is just not that hard.
Leaving that behind, I do have a couple of quibbles with his arguments. The main one is that at the end of the book he gives humanity an assignment which he believes will lead out of the impossible morass of modernity, but the author has not answered two fundamental questions: Why would humanity come together to respond to his assignment? (This is making me laugh a lot- really, why? Have you ever tried to tell a group of people to do something? Let alone every last person on the planet. LMAO.) And, does free will (agency, if you must) exist such that the assignment has any meaning?
The book reminds me quite a bit of The Technological Society, where Ellul also explains an impossible-to-counter direction of society and after explaining all the possibilities at considerable length provides an unsatisfactory way out. But Ellul at least has a reason, even if it is not a very good one, for making the argument in the context of free will. This author is silent on the matter.
And a last matter of irksomeness is that the author uses the term “morality” without any particular meaning. Near the end of the book the author presents a chart attempting to show an analysis of moral questions as they emerge from existential realities, but it is as haphazard as the books the author selected to respond to and therefore does not answer the question of what he means by morality. In fact, if what the author means is direct existential questions, then how the author uses the term in the book as a solution is problematic.
Misc review footnote: The issues discussed in this book map very well to the novels of Thomas Hardy. (less)
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Milad Jahani
Oct 14, 2015Milad Jahani rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
آنتونی گیدنز نویسنده کتاب"تجددو تشخص" به دنبال بررسی و ارتباط بین تجدد در عصر کنونی-اخیر- و هویت شخصی است که رویکردی جامعه شناختی و روانشناختی را زیر بنای صحبت خود قرار می دهد. گیدنز هریک از بخش های موضوعی خود را با توجه به متغییر های در بردارنده اش مورد ارزیابی قرار می دهد.
در ابتدا تجدد در عصر کنونی را ادامه نوعی نظم ما بَعد سنتی می داند و جهانی شدن را جزء سازوکارهای این عصر برمی شمارد. به اعتقاد وی سه اصل را که تحت عنوان پویایی و تحرک اجتماعی یعنی جدایی زمان و فضا ، ساختکارهای تکه برداری و با ...more
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Andy Oram
Dec 03, 2009Andy Oram rated it really liked it
Shelves: politics
I found this very useful to my own understanding of trends and potential in modern times, and I recommend the book for its positive-minded, constructive approach to today's problems. Giddens accepts many of the commonly understand aspects of life today--our reliance of large, abstract systems we don't understand, our risk of losing our individual identities in these systems, the expanded role of the state in our lives, and so on--which is why I assign only four stars to this book instead of five.
Giddens is an optimist, as well as a very capable writer. His book proceeds in a well-planned series of steps from basic principles of modern life to the power we can still exert as individuals and as social movements. (The text becomes easier to read as you go along, I've found.)
The threat of global warming hangs over the text, and its relevance is even clearer now, 18 years after the book was published. Furthermore, I think Giddens assumes that certain movements, such as therapy and woman's liberation, have gone further and reached more of the population than they really have. But the book's message of possibilities persists, and goads us on to moral action.
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Kmorgenstern
May 12, 2018Kmorgenstern rated it it was amazing
In this book, Anthony Giddens offers a very detailed and comprehensive analysis of the existential problems concerning every individual is facing in this late modern age in forging an identity for the self-project. This is by no means an easy task given the confusions of choice we are all confronted with now. This book brilliantly bridges psychology with social science. It is an incredibly dense read, though, forcing one to chew on each sentence to really comprehend the significance of it. Very coherently argued and laid out, it shed a huge light on both my psychology and my sociological studies - and it provided the missing link. Some might be disappointed that in the end, he does not come up with an easy answer, but to me, that is what makes the book even more valuable as it stimulates the reader to really engage and think about the questions and issues asked and find their own answers. I already know, I will be revisiting this book down the road. Right now I am still digesting the first round. (less)
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Burcu
May 25, 2017Burcu added it
The introduction is helpful, yet as the author himself acknowledges, there are many references to earlier works, particularly The Consequences of Modernity. There is some exploration into psychoanalysis as well in the earlier chapters. The main text is essentially a veering of the questions he raised in "The Consequences" toward the idea of the self in relation to the social. In a way, the self is "embedded" into the earlier framework. (less)
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Farid Kamyab
Jun 09, 2017Farid Kamyab rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
خیلی دقیق و کوتاه بگم: منحصر به فرد و دنباله ی کتاب «پیامد های مدرنیت» که اینبار نه جامعه شناسی، بلکه بیشتر یک اثر در زمینه روان شناسی اجتماعی است.
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Tanya
Aug 08, 2012Tanya rated it it was amazing
Shelves: misc-academic, globalization
Excellent book on the "modern project" of the self. Fascinating given it was written over a decade ago. (less)
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Nicholas
Sep 08, 2018Nicholas rated it really liked it
Written by one of the greatest thinkers of modernity, one can’t help but see why this book gives birth to many theoretical spinoffs in fields outside of sociology, such as political science and IR. Never eager to lament about lost innocence or to launch into a tirade against capitalism, Modernity and Self Identity is a meditation that considers both in equal nuance and finesse. That doesn’t mean its diagnosis isn’t piercingly unsettling.
Yet, by ditching Foucauldian and Marxist perspectives that in Gidden’s reckoning is too fast in laying the blame on power and domination, the book offers us no easy way out of the contradiction between a self-referential system and its underlying meaningless. And being reflexive about it doesn’t make it better. Such is the genius yet terrifying indictment of Giddens. (less)
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KimNica
Dec 28, 2019KimNica rated it liked it
Shelves: politics-economics-society
Many points Giddens makes with regards to living under conditions of high modernity resonate and don't ring less true thirty years after they were first written. However, Giddens technical language and sparse use of examples makes many of them difficult to follow - I had to read many sections and even chapters multiple times to really understand them which is a bit annoying. Also, let's not forget that the perspective of this book is extremely Eurocentric and that many observations are probably less applicable if you are not from a Western First World country.
Nonetheless, there is a lot in here for anyone remotely interested in the social sciences and contemporary life. (less)
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