Produktbild: Extravagance and Misery

Extravagance and Misery The Emotional Regime of Market Societies

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

05.11.2024

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

512

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,4/4 cm

Gewicht

889 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-778172-2

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

05.11.2024

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

512

Maße (L/B/H)

24/16,4/4 cm

Gewicht

889 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-778172-2

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: Extravagance and Misery
    • Introduction

    • Chapter One: The Problem of Inequality

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 The Facts of Inequality

    • 2 The Structural Basis of the 'New' Inequality

    • 3 Is America an 'Outlier'?

    • 4 Inequality and Globalisation

    • Chapter Two: Empirical Data on Inequality and Dual Economy

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 The Critique of Rent Seeking

    • 2 Wage Suppression and the Dual Economy

    • 3 Rent Seeking, Resentment and Angrynomics

    • Chapter Three: Addressing Inequality: A Normative Framework

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 The Badness of Inequality

    • 2 Distinctions of Caste and Class

    • 3 Domination, Wealth and Anxiety

    • 4 A Distinction Within Egalitarianism

    • Chapter Four: Recruiting the Science of Happiness

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Problematic Correlations

    • 2 A Positive Role for the Science of Happiness?

    • 3 Going Beyond the Spirit Level

    • Chapter Five: Emotions, Explanations and Emotional Regimes

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 A General Conception of Emotions

    • 2 The Justificatory Role of Emotions

    • 3 Emotions in Social Explanations

    • 4 Universalism or Constructivism About Emotions?

    • 5 Reddy's Conception of Emotional Regimes

    • 6 Other Aspects of Emotional Regimes

    • 7 The Emotional Appeal of Market Fundamentalism

    • Chapter Six: Rousseau, Smith and Hegel on the Emotional Regimes of Commercial Society

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Rousseau's Originating Critique

    • 2 From Rousseau to Smith

    • 3 From Smith to Hegel

    • 4 The New Inequality in a Classical Frame

    • 5 Rousseau's, Smith's and Hegel's Emotional Regimes

    • Chapter Seven: The Emotional Regimes of Roman Republicanism and Political Liberalism

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Republicanism's Economy of Esteem

    • 2 Political Liberalism's Emotional Regime

    • 3 Rawlsian Stability in a Rousseauian Frame

    • Chapter Eight: The Promises and Failures of Capitalist Market Societies

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1: The Continuing Appeal of Smith's Ideal

    • 2 Extending the Model to Financialised Capitalism

    • 3 Veblen: The Engineer versus the Capitalist

    • 4 Kalecki: The Disciplinary Role of Unemployment

    • 5 The Proliferation of Capitalist Discipline

    • 6 Financialisation and the Disciplinary Role of Debt

    • 7 Can Smith's Ideal Survive in the Twenty-First Century?

    • Chapter Nine: Positional Goods and Opportunity Hoarding

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Hirsch on Positional Goods

    • 2 Opportunity Hoarding

    • 3 Positionality and Cultural Legislation

    • 4 Positionality, De-Marketisation and Public Goods

    • Chapter Ten: The Science of Happiness, Inequality and Well-being

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Why (Not) Use Empirical Evidence about Happiness and Well-being?

    • 2 General and Specific Conceptions of Well-being

    • 3 Our Approach: Ecumenical Yet Committed

    • 4 Well-being: Methodological and Normative Issues

    • 5 Well-being and Emotional Regimes

    • 6 Income, Wealth and Well-being

    • 7 Income and Wealth Inequality and Its Relation to Well-being

    • 8 Using the Science of Happiness

    • Chapter Eleven: Inequality, Shame, Envy and Admiration: A Smithian Perspective

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 The Inevitability of Shame in Stratified Societies

    • 2 The Moral Psychological Impact of the Shame of Poverty

    • 3 Shame, Stigmatisation and Rationality

    • 4 Smith and Admiration for the Rich

    • 5 Veblen and Emulation for the Rich in Market Societies

    • 6 Admiration, Emulation and Envy in Capitalist Market Societies

    • 7 Ought We to Disregard Envy and Admiration for the Rich?

    • Chapter Twelve: The False Promise of Meritocracy and Its Emotional Regime

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 A Short History of Meritocracy

    • 2 Meritocracy as an Incoherent Ideal

    • 3 Meritocracy as an Unrealisable Ideal

    • 4 Meritocracy as an Unstable Ideal

    • 5 The Falsity of the Meritocratic Explanation of the New Inequality

    • 6 The Functional Role of Meritocratic Beliefs

    • 7 Merit's Role in the Emotional Regime of Capitalism

    • 8 The Impact of Meritocratic Beliefs on Well-being

    • 9 Meritocracy, Oppression and Affective Injustice

    • Chapter Thirteen: Republican and Liberal Emotional Regimes Revisited

    • Propositional Summary

    • Introduction

    • 1 Strong and Weak Egalitarianism and Stability

    • 2 Self-Respect, Confidence and Mutual Investment

    • 3 Full Employment and the De-Commodification of Labour

    • 4 Realistic Utopianism about Work: Eliminating Bottlenecks

    • 5 De-Marketisation, Public Goods and the Commons

    • 6 Rawlsian Associationalism: Putting Positionality in Its Place

    • 7 A People's Money

    • 8 Priorities Without Prioritarianism

    • Conclusion

    • List of Works Cited