2021/08/02

The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and Eroticism in Modern Societies eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and Eroticism in Modern Societies eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

The Transformation of Intimacy: Sexuality, Love and Eroticism in Modern Societies Kindle Edition
by Anthony Giddens  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
3.9 out of 5 stars    18 ratings
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Review
'It is difficult to imagine social-scientific thought and practice in Britain and much of Continental Europe without the distinctive contribution of Anthony Giddens. His prolific work has the unique merit of tying together the rich tradition of modern social thought with the challenges of whatever is new and unprecedented in what he has called the 'late modern' or 'post-traditional' world.' Times Literary Supplement
'The major achievement of Professor Giddens is to have written a book which is both politically correct and interesting ... an immensely enjoyable book.' Political Studies

'Interesting and informative, thoughtful and thought provoking, concise and to the point.' Contemporary Sociology

'A powerful, and often brilliantly provocative, theory of how sexuality and gender are reproduced and transformed ... a model of theoretically informed, empirically based sociological analysis that will be of great interest to all those concerned with the trajectory of sexuality, gender, and identity in modern social processes.' The Times Higher Education Supplement

About the Author
Anthony Giddens is Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science.
From the Back Cover
“Giddens, a towering figure in Anglo-American sociology, has now extended his analyses of modernity to include the area of intimacy in this thoughtful and provocative book.”—Choice
“This is a short book that differs in style from Giddens’s others. He strives here for accessibility and readability. . . . The chapters are all interesting and informative, thoughtful and thought-provoking, concise and to the point.”—Contemporary Sociology
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From the Inside Flap
The sexual revolution: an evocative term, but what meaning can be given to it today? How does “sexuality” come into being, and what connections does it have with the changes that have affected personal life more generally? In answering these questions, the author disputes many of the dominant interpretations of the role of sexuality in modern culture.
The author suggests that the revolutionary changes in which sexuality has become cauth up are more long-term than generally conceded. He sees them as intrinsic to the development of modern societies as a whole and to the broad characteristics of that development. Sexuality as we know it today is a creation of modernity, a terrain upon which the contradictory tendencies of modern social life play themselves out in full. Emancipation and oppression, opportunity and risk—these have become a part of a heady mix that irresistably ties our individual lives to global outcomes and the transformation of intimacy.
We live today in a social order in which, for the first time in histroy, women are becoming equal to men—or at least have lodged a claim to such equality as their right. The author does not attempt to analyze the gender inequalities that persist in the economic or political domains, but instead concentrates on a more hisdden personal area in which women—ordinary women, in the course of their day-to-day lives, quite apart from any political agenda—have pioneered changes of greate, and generalizable, importance. These changes essentially concern an exploration of the potentialities of the “pure relationship,” a relaitonship that presumes sexual and emotional equality, and is explosive in its connotations for pre-existing relations of power.
The author analyzes the emergence of what he calls plastic sexuality—sexuality freed from its intrinsic relation to reproduction—in terms of the emotional emancipation implicit in the pure relationship, as well as women’s claim to sexual pleasure. Plastic sexuality is decentered sexuality, freed from both reproduction and subservience to a fixed object. It can be molded as a trait of personality, and thus become bound up with the reflexivity of the self. Premised on plastic sexuality, the pure relationship is not exclusively heterosexual; it is neutral in terms of sexual orientation.
The author speculates that the transformaion of intimacy might be a subversive influence on modern institutions as a whole, for a social world in which the dominant ideal was to achieve intinsic rewards from the company of others might be vastly different from that which we know at the present.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From the Publisher
Anthony Giddens is Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science. --This text refers to the paperback edition.
Review
'It is difficult to imagine social-scientific thought and practice in Britain and much of Continental Europe without the distinctive contribution of Anthony Giddens. His prolific work has the unique merit of tying together the rich tradition of modern social thought with the challenges of whatever is new and unprecedented in what he has called the 'late modern' or 'post-traditional' world.' Times Literary Supplement
'The major achievement of Professor Giddens is to have written a book which is both politically correct and interesting ... an immensely enjoyable book.' Political Studies

'Interesting and informative, thoughtful and thought provoking, concise and to the point.' Contemporary Sociology

'A powerful, and often brilliantly provocative, theory of how sexuality and gender are reproduced and transformed ... a model of theoretically informed, empirically based sociological analysis that will be of great interest to all those concerned with the trajectory of sexuality, gender, and identity in modern social processes.' The Times Higher Education Supplement

--This text refers to the paperback edition.
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Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07M9CXB75
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Polity; 1st edition (23 April 2013)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 549 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Print length ‏ : ‎ 224 pages
Customer Reviews: 3.9 out of 5 stars    18 ratings


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jo
3.0 out of 5 stars ok
Reviewed in Germany on 4 February 2019
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七海光一
4.0 out of 5 stars 読み返すにたる価値を有する
Reviewed in Japan on 19 April 2005
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近代社会における性愛概念の変容をあとづけ、今後人間にとっての性愛が如何にあるべきかを説く、この分野でも特に著名な書物。フーコーの、権力の管理下にある身体という解釈を部分的には認めるが、消費社会における、恋愛マニュアルなどが、生活習慣や性愛観念の相互浸透性に与える影響を無視できないとする著者の立場は、より時代に即した考え方であると思う。所謂、性の二重基準や性の人格原則などに見られる男権主義的性愛観念を超えた、コミュニケーションとしての性のあり方の進展は、広義の社会の民主化の進展と無関係ではない、という著者の指摘は的を得たものと思う。議論がやや抽象的で、平易な英語にも関わらずやや解りづらいところもあるが、読むのに妨げになるほど大きな問題ではない。だが、こうした大学系の出版物によくある、編集の甘さから生じる綴りの誤りが散見され、この点に関しては、出版社の反省を促したい。
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kaminsky
4.0 out of 5 stars moralistic. but...
Reviewed in the United States on 16 November 2020
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a rather moralistic view of female promiscuity.
despite this issue this book is very influential. Giddens concept of "pure relationship" is widely cited -
examples - Enrique Gil Calvo "EL NUEVO SEXO DEBIL" -
Oscar Guasch "LA CRISIS DE LA HETEROSEXUALIDAD".
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Alex Nelson
5.0 out of 5 stars Essential theory in the sociology of love
Reviewed in the United States on 27 April 2015
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Giddings is as acceptable as pure theory gets which is probably why he is popularly assigned in classrooms. It's also a nice quick read.
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Marc
1.0 out of 5 stars A Stunningly Flawed Work from a Legitimate Giant
Reviewed in the United States on 18 March 2016
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Giddens' attempt at micro-sociology and a venture into psychological theory and gender studies is an amazing failure. The question of agreement aside, he takes the most uniformly rejected components of Freud, rejects discourse on essentialism, and oversteps his foundation and evidence to create a perplexing argument that male dominance and aggression are resultant from female abandonment, most specifically the loss of control over women. This book, if popularly known, would be an excellent reinforcement for men's rights groups, as it essentially argues that everyone's social problems are the result of men caught in a culture gap, whereby the natural order they expect has evaporated, so the frustration of not being able to dominate women or have complicit women in their lives, causes them to "reasonably" dominate them. In once example, a discussion on pornography as evidence of how men suffer no sexual enjoyment compared to women, he characterizes the participants as the women being grateful and satisfied, while the men plod on silently without joy or expression. It's stunning that someone could interpret something so inversely. I'm guessing most people read this for a class. If you don't have to, don't read this unless you want to be mad at insulting and lazy scholarship, or if you are an insecure man who wants to blame women's attempts for equality for their own rapes.
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Therese
Jul 07, 2020Therese rated it really liked it
Shelves: research-authoritarianism, dating-and-relationships, politics-and-society, philosophy, psychology, womens-issues
This is a sociologist's perspective on how concepts of intimacy and relationships have changed since the sexual revolution of the 1960s. I was interested in it because I'm trying to understand authoritarianism at both the political and personal level, and part of my thinking is that there is a relationship between authoritarian attitudes and intimacy, since authoritarianism revolves around control, and controlling another person is arguably a form of intimacy, in which there's a breaking down of barriers between two wills to enable the intrusion of one will into another.

I think it was Giddens who first introduced the concept of "pure relationships" in sociology. This refers to consensual relationships people have just for the sake of their own happiness and fulfillment, which they can leave at will. Giddens idea is that such relationships have become more common and more of an ideal since the sexual revolution, particularly for women and GLBTQ folks. The idea of the pure relationship differs from e.g. traditional marriage, which was more of a practical economic arrangement, or the notion of romantic love or sexual license that was driven by emotional or physical compulsion. A lot of people have struggled with this shift, for example, straight men and women in cases where the women have moved away from ideals of chastity and see sex as a prelude to an egalitarian relationship, but where the men don't want commitment and just want sex.

I mostly skimmed the chapters in the beginning and middle, because even though Giddens was doing important work by putting into words a lot of the changes that had been wrought by modernity, viewed from today's perspective it didn't feel very new or surprising to me. Where things got interesting was the last two chapters, where he discusses ideas from the philosopher Wilhelm Reich about repression and from Herbert Marcuse about "eros and civilization." (I haven't read Reich or Marcuse, so can't judge how accurately Giddens represents their thinking, but found the ideas interesting.) Reich was against bourgeois marriage as a repressive, authoritarian institution. He believed that traditional monogamous marriage served to develop authoritarian traits of character, which in turn supported an exploitative social system. Despite Reich's reputation as a wackadoodle crackpot, there's clearly some truth to this.

Marcuse's idea was that sexual emancipation should not be considered the same thing as just hedonism. Sexual love becomes liberating in combination with respect for the other as an equal, which disrupts the old traditional patriarchalist (authoritarian) family structure and also paves the way for broader egalitarian social citizenship. However, when sexual permissiveness turns into objectifying others as commodities of pleasure, it becomes just another form of oppressiveness.

In the last chapter of the book, Giddens expands on these ideas to talk about how egalitarian relationships between people can both follow a model of democracy at the personal level and reinforce egalitarian democracy at the political level. For me, this all goes toward showing how humanist ethics is foundational for democracy and how healthy interpersonal relationships based on mutual respect model healthy democracy as a system of governance. This contrasts with domestic abuse and violence, which models authoritarian governance - a point also made in a book I read about the mindset of domestic abusers, Why Does He Do That?: Inside the Minds of Angry and Controlling Men. The latter book was written by a clinical psychologist who had spent decades working with abusers, and has an insightful chapter where the author argues that the mindset of abusers is also reflected in systems of social and political oppression.

Giddens's book can also be considered in combination with another book I panned in a review a while back, Mark Regnerus's Cheap Sex: The Transformation of Men, Marriage, and Monogamy. Regnerus, as I pointed out, reveals himself as anti-individualist and authoritarian in his thinking, and his book revolves around contrasting Giddens's idea of the pure relationship with the "exchange" model of relationships - the more traditional idea of marriage as economic exchange. Regnerus loves the exchange model, is clearly nostalgic for the days when people could be said to "own" each other, and can't seem to get out of the dehumanizing idea of human beings as useful goods; Regnerus argues (obliquely, not directly) that the pure relationship model inevitably devolves into this commoditization of sex as consumption, and that the exchange model at least has the dignity of focusing on sexual exchange from a producer perspective instead of the consumer perspective.

I find Regnerus's views horrible, as I think real feminist emancipation is to treat women as human beings, not as objects, and it doesn't help to consider intimate relationships through the lens of economic production instead of as a consumer activity - the goal should be to go beyond such a limited view. Even while we recognize and concede that human beings will always see each other to some degree as useful means to various practical ends, there's also a humanist, ethical imperative to see each other as more than merely this, as ends in ourselves. Without this humanist respect for the sacredness of others' autonomy, it is all too easy to fall into authoritarian forms of relationship and governance in both the public and private spheres. (less)
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The Consequences of Modernity eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Books

The Consequences of Modernity eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Books

The Consequences of Modernity Kindle Edition
by Anthony Giddens  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
4.5 out of 5 stars    30 ratings
In this major theoretical statement, the author offers a new and provocative interpretation of the institutional transformations associated with modernity. We do not as yet, he argues, live in a post-modern world. Rather the distinctive characteristics of our major social institutions in the closing period of the twentieth century express the emergence of a period of 'high modernity,' in which prior trends are radicalised rather than undermined. A post-modern social universe may eventually come into being, but this as yet lies 'on the other side' of the forms of social and cultural organization which currently dominate world history.
In developing an account of the nature of modernity, Giddens concentrates upon analyzing the intersections between trust and risk, and security and danger, in the modern world. Both the trust mechanisms associated with modernity and the distinctive 'risk profile' it produces, he argues, are distinctively different from those characteristic of pre-modern social orders.

This book build upon the author's previous theoretical writings, and will be of fundamental interest to anyone concerned with Gidden's overall project. However, the work covers issues which the author has not previously analyzed and extends the scope of his work into areas of pressing practical concern. This book will be essential reading for second year undergraduates and above in sociology, politics, philosophy, and cultural studies.
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Helge Loebler
5.0 out of 5 stars trust isn't a personal matter anymore
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 June 2013
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Everybody knows trust as a property of personal relationships. However Giddens shows how trust has lost its original reference which was based in personal relationships. Trust is demanded in the case of ignorance. Division of labor has created abstract systems which Giddens distinguishes into expert systems and symbolic tokens. Lawyers, medical doctors, Pilots etc. are expert systems which layman either have to trust in or to avoid. Symbolic tokens are media of interchange which can be passed around independent from their references. Examples are money, ratings and gradings. An A at school doesn't need any further explanation. Everybody knows what it means without knowing the school, the teachers etc. Abstract system dis-embed from face-to-face situations. This is one of the fundamental changes in modernity as compared to premordern societies. Giddens book goes much further than just describing and explaining abstract systems. He describes and explains how other areas of day to day live are fundamentally influenced by modernity. For me the Value of this book is that Giddens gives us the concepts and words to describe and understand a world we live in; a complex world we are experiencing in most parts intuitively.
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The Consequences of Modernity
by Anthony Giddens
 3.79  ·   Rating details ·  799 ratings  ·  35 reviews
In this major theoretical statement, the author offers a new and provocative interpretation of institutional transformations associated with modernity. What is modernity? The author suggests, "As a first approximation, let us simply say the following: 'modernity' refers to modes of social life or organization which emerged in Europe from about the seventeenth century onwards and which subsequently became more or less worldwide in their influence."

We do not as yet, the author argues, live in a post-modern world. The distinctive characteristics of our major social institutions in the closing years of the twentieth century suggest that, rather than entering into a period of post-modernity, we are moving into a period of "high modernity" in which the consequences of modernity are becoming more radicalized and universalized than before. A post-modern social universe may eventually come into being, but this as yet lies on the other side of the forms of social and cultural organization that currently dominate world history.

In developing a fresh characterization of the nature of modernity, the author concentrates on the themes of security versus danger and o trust versus risk. Modernity is a double-edged phenomenon. The development of modern social institutions has created vastly greater opportunities for human beings to enjoy a secure and rewarding existence than in any type of pre-modern system. But modernity also has a somber side that has become very important in the present century, such as the frequently degrading nature of modern industrial work, the growth of totalitarianism, the threat of environmental destruction, and the alarming development of military power and weaponry.

The book builds upon the author's previous theoretical writings and will be of great interest to those who have followed his work through the years. However, this book covers issues the author has not previously analyzed and extends the scope of his work into areas of pressing practical concern.

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Paperback, 188 pages
Published 1991 by Stanford University Press (first published 1988)
Original TitleThe Consequences of Modernity
ISBN0804718911 (ISBN13: 9780804718912)
Edition LanguageEnglish
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Modernliğin Sonuçları 
پیامدهای مدرنیت 
As Conseqüências da Modernidade 
The Consequences of Modernity 
Le conseguenze della modernità: fiducia e rischio, sicurezza e pericolo
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Trevor
Jun 02, 2014Trevor rated it it was amazing
Shelves: social-theory
This guy has been loitering in a series of other books I’ve been reading over the last few years. I’ve been meaning to read him, and now I have. Most notably, he has quite a role in Beck’s Risk Society – which is fairly obvious why, when you have read both books.

In some ways this book probably should be called ‘The Consequences of Post-Modernity’ – except that people have connotations about what post-modern means and these connotations would distract from what the author is really trying to do. This guy isn’t really a post-modernist – you know, if that term is taken to mean post-structuralist – but he does think we live in a time that is after the modern, in that the Enlightenment project needs to be abandoned if by that we think we can 'understand' and control society.

One of the things I often do in these reviews is explain people’s views with reference to Marx. In this case, this guy does much the same, so I feel more justified. Marx basically said that Capitalism was trouble. He said this for many of the reasons that Capitalism has ended up being trouble – crisis prone, unequal, savage to the poor, those sorts of things. But Marx believed in a kind of teleology, that if you got rid of the bad bits of Capitalism you could have a pretty nice society. Socialism – Communism – something directed at human needs, anyway – you know, Marx was never terribly specific about any of this. The point was that overthrowing Capitalism was meant to bring about good times. The point of this book is to look at ideas like risk and mistrust, not as categories that are by-products of the evils of Capitalism, but as products of post-modernity. That risks and issues of trust are not really by-products of Capitalism that can be wished away with the glorious victory of Socialism – but that they are fundamental to the modern condition and not likely to go away under any conceivable set of circumstances.

A lot of this book looks at the problem of trust. The simplest things in our society require a remarkable amount of trust. The example given is flying to LA. There are lots of things we need to know to get to LA on a plane – I would need to know what an airline ticket was, have my passport, how to get to the airport, what is appropriate to wear (you know, no t-shirts with God is Great written on them) or to say to the customs people – but what I wouldn’t need to know even the first thing about is how to fly the plane. I wouldn’t even need to know how the plane flies. There are other people that we call experts that can worry about those sorts of things. But this isn’t quite the same as ‘faith’. Obviously, there is a kind of faith involved, however, in the case of the plane at least, that faith doesn’t really amount to the same sort of thing as believing in the virgin birth, say.

Or does it? We like to think that if we wanted we could go off and learn enough physics to understand how a plane flies and then learn how to fly one. But we certainly couldn’t really do all of that – learn how to make a plane and so on - eventually we come back to having to have trust in someone. And the way science is taught it is generally presented as a series of givens – it is transmitted as a series of truths that must be accepted whole. It is only towards the end of a science degree that the first glimmers of the limits of what we know start to become clear. Faith is a necessary companion of trust, I guess. But trust is difficult to sustain in a post-modern world.

Take global warming, the example given in the book is nuclear war, but for some daft reason we seem to imagine this risk has disappeared. Global warming is hardly a ‘side-effect’ of Capitalism. If Capitalism is inconceivable without constant growth, it is hard to see how global warming isn’t then also a necessary consequence of Capitalism. And if, rather than our hopes that the rise in temperatures will be at the bottom end of predictions, it ends up at the top end – what then? I’ve read estimates that the world will only be able to sustain a population of about half a billion people. Given there is over seven billion here now, that means an over supply of about six and a half billion people. This is truly nightmare stuff. Clearly there is some level of risk that this might happen – but it is in the future and it is a relatively small risk as far as we humans as individuals are able to assess such things. So, we either ignore these risks as much as we can or we make ourselves sick in worrying about things we have no power to fix.

And here is one of the fundamental conditions of late modernity. There are all of these risks and they call into question our trust in those around us, but we can do virtually nothing to address that lack of trust. You know, if you catch your husband in bed with another woman, there is something you can do. Your trust is probably shattered, and so you can leave him. Okay, but you can’t really leave society if you lose trust in it. Where would you go? As he points out brilliantly here – the opposite of trust isn’t really mistrust, that is far too gentle a term – the opposite of trust is anxiety.

Think about that for a while. Think of all of the people who spend so much time in some form of therapy or have some sort of anxiety disorder – how much can that be blamed to a fundamental lack of trust and one we can do literally nothing to avoid?

He makes the point that society isn’t really a car we have control over, but rather a juggernaut. We can sometimes guide where it goes, but it is always on the verge of careening off course or crashing to bits. We want to believe that with a few more modification the whole thing will come under our control – that society is essentially a product of the individual actions of humans and so all that is required is an exercise of our will or free agency and all will be well. But the problem is that society is literally bigger than all of us – even all of us added together.

There is much more to this book than I’ve covered here. I really can recommend this book as well worth reading and thinking about.
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Pooya Roohi
Mar 30, 2014Pooya Roohi rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
گیدنز ویژگی های مدرنیته، مخاطرات و پیامدهای آن و نیز راه حل هایی را که به عقیده او برای فائق آمدن بر این مخاطرات می توان اتخاذ کرد را مورد بحث و بررسی قرار داده است.

یکی از مهم ترین خصوصیات مدرنیته دو لبه بودن آن است. به عقیده گیدنز باید هر دو روی پرخطر و پرامکانات مدرنیته را مطالعه کرد. مدرنیته در همان حال که برای انسان ها امنیتی به ارمغان آورده که در گذشته میسر نبود، خطراتی نیز به وجود آورده که در طول تاریخ حتی تصور آن نیز محال بود. مارکس، وبر و دورکیم به جنبه های پرخطر مدرنیته همچون محیط زیست، ...more
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Amirsaman
Oct 03, 2018Amirsaman rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
قبل از این‌که قرن هفده بشود و سرعت رشد صنعت بترکاند و مدرنیسم شروع شود، «سرنوشت» داشتیم. ولی در دوره‌ی مدرن، «ریسک» داریم؛ حالتی که منافع و ضررهای احتمالی را در نظر می‌گیریم و بر مبنای این اعتماد، نهایتا خودمان را ملامت می‌کنیم. یعنی انسان مدرن پذیرفته است که «بیشتر احتمال‌هایی که بر فعالیت بشری تاثیر می‌گذارند زاییده‌ی انسان‌اند و نه خدا یا طبیعت.»

بخش عمده‌ی کتاب، صرف تشریح ترس انسان از مخاطرات دنیای مدرن، و اعتماد او به این ابزارهای نو شده است.

کتاب بقدری «کلی» بحث می‌کرد که چیز زیادی دستم را ن ...more
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M&A Ed
Dec 28, 2018M&A Ed rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
کتاب بسیار خوبی بود که آنتونی گیدنز درباره ی پیامدهای مدرنیت نوشته است! از جمله پیامدهای مدرنیت جنگ های هسته ای هست که در این کتاب بسیار به آن اشاره می کند. ترممه سلیس و روان مترجم در درک مطالب به خواننده بسیار کمک می کند.
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Andrew
Nov 07, 2012Andrew rated it it was amazing
Shelves: sociology
This relatively short book, based on a series of lectures Giddens gave over twenty years ago, still contains fresh insights - although I think it may be difficult to use this an introduction to his thinking, since it rehearses some ideas as well as a theory of modernity that he outlined in greater detail in earlier works, especially his book 'The Nation State and Violence,' which might be my favorite of his writings because it's grounded in history as much as history. Still I liked his discussion here of symbolic tokens and trust and risk (arguments that I think owe a lot to Niklas Luhmann), as well as his multdimensional reading of modern society as formed through a conjunction of overlapping forces - in particular, industrialism, capitalism, militarism, and democracy. It's still a vision of modern society that deserves to be revisited periodically. (less)
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Tuncay Özdemir
Dec 23, 2020Tuncay Özdemir rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: sociology, nonfiction, philosophy, politics, history
"Modernliğin Sonuçları", soyut sistemlerin giderek daha fazla hayatımızın bir parçası olarak ontolojik güvenlik algımızı radikal bir şekilde değiştirmesini konu ediyor. Geleneksel toplumlardaki güvenlik unsurları ve tehditler, bugünün toplumunda artık geçersiz olsa da modern toplumların çok daha farklı güven unsurları ve tehlikeleri mevcuttur. Giddens, tüm bunları postmodernliğe bir geçiş olarak değil de modernliğin radikalleşmesi olarak yorumluyor ve alternatif bir perspektif sunuyor. Dili bira ...more
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Ayesha
Mar 30, 2021Ayesha rated it liked it
Like, yeah it’s fine. It’s sociological theory what more can I say 🥴
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Perdana
Feb 02, 2018Perdana rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Some parts of my review for the class (yes, I cheat the reading challenge).

Giddens’ The Consequences of Modernity gives an interesting take on how we should scrutinize from modernity. He elaborates the reasons behind the dynamism of modernity; the reorganization and/or the separation of time and space, the disembeddedness, and the reflexivity of modernity (p. 53). Rather than jump into the debate whether the situation that we have now is post-modern(ism), thus implies the break from “modernity”, Giddens focuses on the more fruitful discussion on the consequences of modernity, whether they are intended or not. These consequences also signify how knowledge plays role in the process of transition to modernity, until the modernity itself creates those unintended and intended effects. “the circulation of social knowledge… that alters the circumstances to which the knowledge originally referred” (p. 54). In our discussion, I would like to focus on Giddens’ explanation on risk and would like to connect to his historical investigation.

Giddens writes that the most classical thinkers “did not see how extensive the darker side of modernity would turn out to be” (p.7), implying that no one had predicted the “negative” side of modernity. I would like to dig the question to what extend we should do this risk calculation? What gave birth to the risk speculations that fuel our modern need to rigorously calculate risk and danger; using statistics, mega planning, high-modernist development, overcoming existential crisis, etc. And why should we? What systemic benefit that ones could gain by keep predicting the unstable world – especially when the modern knowledge (this means the statistics, modern urban planning, heavy industrialization) contributes to this instability (p.45)? The reason we have risks calculated in certain manners, because we already plan something ahead in a grandiose universal manner. Rather than answering the question, Giddens justifies the spectrums of risk, that we all now have, which are closely tied to modernity. In pre-modern era, risk was already available, but more to “natural causes”, i.e., earthquake or “natural” disasters (p. 102, p. 110) and how it did not evolve to more structured manner, for example systemic risk – a scapegoat that was to blame for the 2008 economic crisis by the British economists.

How was the spectrum of risk different in pre-modern/traditional time? Especially when the tradition, according to Giddens, never really fades away and even co-exists with the modernity (p…). Trust in the abstract system and confidence in risk calculation, for example, have become the replacement of fate/fortuna (p. 111). Giddens says that the risk in modernity tends to have more future-oriented rather than the past. Although it is convincing enough if we look at the current system from Wall Street to Chicago Climate Exchange, it does not really explain the once-existing future-oriented behavior in traditional society, especially in the concept of survivability, e.g., inheritance, food storing, the expectations from offerings for the elder and dead people. Giddens’ take on this, for me, is quite high-modernistic. Although it is true that risk is not just about “danger and peril” (Hacking, p. 199) and more about “probability, eventuality” (ibid), it is still unclear for me what brings to more sophisticated risk management (like insurance).

In the most “acultural” (or material-based) sense, we might investigate this emergence of modern risk through the scale of the constituted risk, or the problem of accumulation – whether it is in the system of capitalism (Weber and Marx) or industrialism (Durkheim). Growth–be it personal (overcoming the existential crisis/ontological security), economic, or cultural (globalization)—has been a key feature in modernity. Growth can mean anything that gradually or not expands, but to put in the definition, growth is an enlarged accumulation (Levebfre, 1981). Although Giddens did not explain anything specific about growth (I assume it is both in the darker and brighter side of modernity), the idea that we need to expand for better or worse (as unintended consequences?) contribute to the modern management of risk. In the spectrum of capitalism, risk is critical in sustaining the system.

In the 2008 financial crash, a lot of economists explained that housing bubble in China and the market crash occurred due to the “systemic risk” – a risk that is in-built within a system that is highly speculative like financial and stock markets. If imaginary investments are the fuel for this systemic risk, that what would it be for general modern spectrums of risk? We did not have this systemic and complicated system to handle risk in pre-modern society because the idea of growth was still rudimentary; a peasant dared not to imagine being a successful merchant whose wealth was as many as the Dutch King, for example—let alone in the colonial society during the colonialization. (less)
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Elizabeth
Sep 14, 2011Elizabeth rated it really liked it
Shelves: 2011
This book's greatest contribution (likely what causes it to be cited with such regularity) is in some ways also its biggest drawback. Giddens is doing such high level theorizing that his examples, themselves, are also largely grounded in theory. This makes for a fully understandable and (especially at the time it was published in 1990) a relevant intervention into theories of modernity and postmodernity; nonetheless, it also makes for an argument that is less grounded in specific empirics than it might be. This seems especially relevant as Giddens is most interested in society-level critiques, which both (necessarily) define and situate modernism and modernity as they relate to specific social processes and functions (rather than aesthetics or taste). Giddens is honest about this, and his role as a sociologist certainly justifies the centrality of his critique. However, it is difficult to know how much could be abstracted beyond the large-scale social domains that he defines and describes. (less)
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Marcos Henrique Amaral
Apr 23, 2019Marcos Henrique Amaral rated it it was amazing  ·  review of another edition
Nesta obra, Giddens mantém sua postura crítica em relação não somente à sociologia clássica, como também à sociologia contemporânea. De forma geral, o autor traz diversos escritos sobre a modernidade, que se caracterizaria — segundo Giddens — pelo “descontinuísmo”, ou seja, seria diferente, sob alguns aspectos, completamente diferente tradição. A tradição seria a “cola que une as ordens sociais pré-modernas”, integrando a ação à organização tempo-espacial dessas “sociedades pré-modernas”. Sumariamente, a tradição seria uma orientação contínua ao passado, de modo que tal passado é constituído para ter pesada influência no presente. O descontinuísmo que caracteriza a modernidade, segundo Giddens, é o rompimento com esta tradição genuína, ou seja, com valores vinculados ao passado pré-moderno, “criando” novas tradições. A modernidade apresenta essa descontinuidade como ruptura entre o que se apresenta como “novo” e o que persiste como herança do “velho”. Com isto, ele quer romper com qualquer influência que o evolucionismo social possa ter sobre sua sociologia, de modo que busca fugir das concepções que mostram a história humana como um grande enredo que traz a idéia de organização.
Para ele, é importante notar que as descontinuidades que separam as instituições sociais modernas das ordens sociais tradicionais têm peculiaridades próprias à modernidade: (i) o ritmo de mudança — já que a rapidez da mudança em condições modernas é extrema —; (ii) o escopo da mudança, se considerarmos que as transformações na modernidade perpassam todo o globo terrestre; e (iii) a natureza intrínseca das instituições modernas. É válido ressaltar que, nesta concepção de modernidade, já estão inseridos elementos por meio dos quais autores como Lyotard caracterizam uma suposta pós-modernidade, tais como a “evaporação do enredo” por meio do qual somos inseridos na história como tendo um passado perene e um futuro predizível e a “pluralidade de reivindicações heterogêneas de conhecimento”. Para ele, o tema sobre o qual se debruçam os pós-modernas nada são senão as próprias conseqüências da modernidade.
A crítica que ele faz à sociologia clássica — de Marx, Durkheim e Weber, essencialmente — se coloca em três pilares: (i) o diagnóstico institucional da modernidade; (ii) a concepção de sociedade para estes autores — que tratavam sociedade como sinônimo do Estado-Nação moderno —; (iii) as conexões entre conhecimento sociológico e as características da modernidade.
Outra noção que, para Giddens, parece central para a compreensão da modernidade é a noção de desencaixe. Para ele, nas sociedades pré-modernas — ou tradicionais —, as relações sociais estão encaixadas no eixo espaço-tempo. O tempo, para os indivíduos dessas sociedades, é cíclico e local, de modo que ele orienta toda a organização social, gerando a noção de encaixe. A modernidade seria caracterizada por um tempo social e artificial: um tempo linear, e não cíclico como na pré-modernidade, de modo que não pode servir como referência para previsões. Mais ainda, a noção de tempo na modernidade é universal e não local. Isto gera a impressão de uma diminuição das distâncias entre os espaços, uma vez que o tempo calibra a organização de sociedades espalhadas em diferentes parte do globo. Assim, a modernidade “desencaixa” o indivíduo de sua identidade fixa no tempo e no espaço. Dois trechos da obra elucidam esse mecanismo de desencaixe: “Por desencaixe me refiro ao ‘deslocamento’ das relações sociais de contextos locais de interação e sua reestruturação através de extensões indefinidas de tempo-espaço” (p. 29). “Este [desencaixe] retira a atividade social dos contextos localizados, reorganizando as relações sociais através de grandes distâncias tempo-espaciais” (p. 58). (less)
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Andrew
Aug 10, 2018Andrew rated it liked it
Quite a short book, written in 1989, and a pretty good window into Giddens' sociology.
Anthony Giddens' is an interesting thinker and a talented writer. I find his work accessible and thought provoking. However, tends to present quite a neat picture of the direction society is headed - away from tradition and towards a kind of cosmopolitan and progressive liberal individualism. Obviously it's not all rosy, and he spends some time discussing environmental problems, as well as the anxieties produced by our "runaway world".
However generally speaking, there's a more or less optimistic tenor to this book - and as I finished it I could definitely envisage Tony Blair's slick grin and hear D:Ream's 1993 hit "Things Can Only Get Better" playing in my head. I do find this good foil for more lopsidedly pessimistic writers - such as Zygmunt Bauman. But it's also a bit hard to reconcile with the state of the world as it is now. (less)
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Jimmy Jonecrantz
Nov 24, 2019Jimmy Jonecrantz rated it it was ok  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: sociology
Hade svårt att komma in i boken, kanske för att den genomgående förhåller sig ganska abstrakt och inte direkt tar exempel eller diskuterar faktiska händelser i någon större utsträckning. Efter att jag läst den är jag lite osäker på vad jag egentligen läst, vad det betyder, och hur jag ska använda detta i min förståelse av samhället. Samtidigt finns vissa observationer, såsom globaliseringens effekter, som är intressanta att diskutera vidare.
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David
Aug 15, 2020David rated it really liked it
This book was outstanding! I finished it one day. I would recommend taking more time, but I was reading it for writing a paper. If you want to get a good idea of how Anthony Giddens thinks, this is a great primer. I highly recommend for any Sociology student interested in the topics of globalism or modernity.
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Abby
Feb 24, 2019Abby rated it it was amazing
Shelves: books-for-school, sociology, in-library
Scholarly work that's written to actually be understood, and that's a nice change...I have more thoughts on the argument itself, but for now I'll just say that it wasn't an absolute misery to read this. (less)
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Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age eBook : Giddens, Anthony: Amazon.com.au: Kindle Store

Modernity and Self-Identity: Self and Society in the Late Modern Age Kindle Edition
by Anthony Giddens  (Author)  Format: Kindle Edition
4.8 out of 5 stars    32 ratings
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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Review
'In this book Anthony Giddens brings back in personality, the psyche, human nature itself. It is a pleasure and a real intellectual advance to have a social theorist of his stature revive the once central but long ignored study of personality and culture, character and society, especially a theorist with his very precise sense of what is truly modern in contemporary life.' Professor Dennis Wrong, New York University
Review
'In this book Anthony Giddens brings back in personality, the psyche, human nature itself. It is a pleasure and a real intellectual advance to have a social theorist of his stature revive the once central but long ignored study of personality and culture, character and society, especially a theorist with his very precise sense of what is truly modern in contemporary life.' Professor Dennis Wrong, New York University
From the Publisher
Anthony Giddens is Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science, and also Professor of Sociology at the University of Cambridge.
From the Inside Flap
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.

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.
About the Author
Anthony Giddens is Director of the London School of Economics and Political Science, and also Professor of Sociology at the University of Cambridge.

Customer Reviews: 4.8 out of 5 stars    32 ratings

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Jo Cursley
5.0 out of 5 stars invaluable reference book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 11 April 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 30 December 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 9 June 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 10 January 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 20 February 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. ...more
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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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Wendy Van Roosmalen
Jul 07, 2021Wendy Van Roosmalen rated it really liked it
Ploegwerk
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Esmeralda Hendrix
Mar 12, 2020Esmeralda Hendrix rated it liked it
Shelves: 2020
Pro: link between self and modernity
Con: extensive, too elaborate, lacking a clear theoretical framework.

General conclusion: nice to read if you want to catch up with a lot of concepts.
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Guilherme Smee
Oct 26, 2017Guilherme Smee rated it really liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: sociologia
Neste livro, o grande sociólogo Anthony Giddens discute a influência da modernidade no nosso sentimento de identidade e, ao mesmo tempo, como a forma que construímos partes da nossa identidade afetou algumas instituições modernas. Não gosto muito desse termo modernidade ao se referir aos dias atuais, acho contemporaneidade muito mais a ver. Já não somos mais modernos, somos pós-modernos, pós-humanos, novos sinceros e não uma palavra que era empregada para um fantoche que sorteava cartas com a Xuxa ao comprarmos um tênis. Enfim... Giddens também usa a palavra auto-identidade, separando, assim, uma identidade dada por outros daquela conferida por nós mesmos. Entretanto eu questiono se a identidade que damos a nós mesmos não tem também a interferência do outro e se aquela que o outro nos confere, não tem também a influência de nós mesmos. O livro é bastante pertinente, embora um pouco desatualizado (a escrita original é de 1998), ainda não trata dos terremotos provocados pela internet. Um conceito que Giddens retoma aqui e achei bastante pertinente para os dias atuais é o de Unwelt, cunhado por Erwin Goffman, um baita antropólogo, que significa a proteção que trazemos para nós mesmos ao construirmos para nós mesmos um casulo social de pessoas que pensam e se comportam como nós. O conceito de Unwelt de Goffman é muito parecido com a bolha dos algoritmos das redes sociais. Giddens traz muitos outros conceitos legais e importantes, mas o que mais valeu a leitura desse livro, para mim, foi o conceito de Unwelt. (less)
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Vern Glaser
Jan 30, 2010Vern Glaser rated it liked it
interesting book that explores how modernity impacts self identity. The basic argument of the book is that modern society provides us with many choices that we can make to mitigate the risks we face in life. In pre-modern society, for example, people lived in one spot and were essentially constrained to take the natural circumstances given to them. But in modern society, we all rely on expert systems that control nature but we really don't understand. And if we really think about the expert systems we rely on there is a lot of risk still there---ie, does the doctor really know what they are doing? are they really an expert?

This way that we rely on expert systems causes us to need to trust, and that trust is based upon routines that we do that give us consistency in life...the way that so much of life is "sequestered" ends up making the modern person having to deal with shame, a sense that we cannot trust anything, not even our own existence.

This is essentially a Marxist extension of the impacts of division of labor...some interesting ideas, but it does not really offer a compelling solution with the "life politics" (less)
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