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E-raamat: Society of Singularities

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  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509534241
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Apr-2020
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781509534241
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Throughout today's society, what is found is not the general but the particular, says Reckwitz, institutions and individuals are pinning their hopes, interests and efforts not on anything standardized or regular, but on the unique and singular. He notes that though this social logic of the singular has proliferated since the 1970s and 1980s, it fully contradicts the social logic of the general that constituted the core of modern society for more than 200 years. He covers modernity between the social logic of the general and the social logic of the particular; the post-industrial economy of singularities; the singularization of the working world; digitalization as singularization: the rise of the culture machine; the singularistic life: lifestyles, classes, subject forms; and differential liberalism and cultural essentialism: the transformation of the political. Distributed in the US by Wiley. Annotation ©2020 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Our contemporary societies place more and more emphasis on the singular and the unique.  The industrial societies of the early 20th century produced standardized products, cities, subjects and organizations which tended to look the same, but in our late-modern societies, we value the exceptional - unique objects, experiences, places, individuals, events and communities which are beyond the ordinary and which claim a certain authenticity.  Industrial society’s logic of the general has been replaced by late modernity’s logic of the particular.

In this major new book, Andreas Reckwitz examines the causes, structures and consequences of the society of singularities in which we now live. The transformation from industrial to cultural capitalism, the rise of digital technologies and their ‘culture machine’ and the emergence of an educated, urban new middle class form a powerful engine for the singularization of the social. In late modernity, what is singular is valorized and stirs the emotions, while what is general has to remain in the background, and this has profound social consequences. The society of singularities systematically produces devaluation and inequality: winner-takes-all markets, job polarization, the neglect of rural regions and the alienation of the traditional middle class. The emergence of populism and the rise of aggressive forms of nationalism which emphasize the cultural authenticity of one’s own people thus turn out to be the other side of singularization.

This prize-winning book offers a new perspective on how modern societies have changed in recent decades and it will be of great value to anyone interested in the forces that are shaping our world today.

Arvustused

Everywhere we see how culture is giving rise to new conflicts and classes. A sociologist offers a clever general theory of our time. Die Zeit Reckwitz has written a special book, an original take on our contemporary world. Literatur Spiegel

Anyone who wishes to understand our times should definitely read Andreas Reckwitz. Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Only a few books fundamentally alter the way you look at the world. Reckwitzs The Society of Singularities ranks among them by offering an unfamiliar lens that makes visible the hidden dynamics of singularization that shape todays economy, technology, and culture. Reading this profound book will help you to create meaning out of seemingly unrelated phenomena, whether you're puzzled by the latest lifestyle trends, crises on social media, or the identity struggles of youth, to name just a few. Urs Gasser, Harvard University

The search for particularity and distinctiveness is a basic feature of contemporary culture. It exists both on the basis of and in tension with continued rationalization and large-scale economic integration and material infrastructure. To understand what has changed and where the continuities lie, Andreas Reckwitz draws on a broad range of social and cultural theory and develops a comprehensive view that repays thoughtful attention. Craig Calhoun, Arizona State University



Magisterial the most interesting book of its kind that I have read since Fred Jamesons Postmodernism: Or, the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism (1991), for here culture and economy come together. Thesis Eleven

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction: The Proliferation of the Particular 1(18)
I Modernity Between the Social Logic of the General and the Social Logic of the Particular
1 The Social Logic of the General
19(13)
Modernity and Generality
19(2)
Typifications and Rationalizations
21(2)
Standardization, Formalization, Generalization
23(2)
Objects, Subjects, Spaces, Times, and Collectives in the Social Logic of the General
25(3)
Industrial Modernity as a Prototype
28(4)
2 The Social Logic of the Particular
32(20)
The General-Particular, Idiosyncrasies, Singularities
33(6)
Objects, Subjects, Spaces, Times, and Collectives in the Social Logic of Singularities
39(4)
Practices of Singularization I: Observation and Evaluation
43(3)
Practices of Singularization II: Production and Appropriation
46(2)
Performativity as a Mode of Praxis and Automated Singularization
48(4)
3 Culture and Culturalization
52(13)
Culture as a Sphere of Valorization and De-Valorization
52(6)
Culturalization versus Rationalization
58(3)
Qualities of Cultural Praxis: Between Sense and Sensibility
61(4)
4 The Transformation of the Cultural Sphere
65(16)
Premodern Societies: The Fixation and Repetition of the Singular
66(2)
Bourgeois Modernity: The Romantic Revolution of the Unique
68(2)
Organized Modernity: Mass Culture
70(2)
Late Modernity: Competitive Singularities, Hyperculture, and Polarization
72(9)
II The Post-Industrial Economy of Singularities
Beyond Industrial Society
81(2)
Unleashing the Creative Economy
83(4)
1 Unique Goods in Cultural Capitalism
87(19)
The Culturalization of Goods
87(4)
Singular Goods: Originality and Rarity
91(2)
Things as Singular Goods
93(2)
Services, Media Formats, and Events as Singular Goods
95(3)
Features of Singular Goods I: The Performance of Authenticity
98(3)
Features of Singular Goods II: Moment and Duration
101(1)
Features of Singular Goods III: Circulation and Hyperculture
102(4)
2 Cultural Singularity Markets
106(25)
Attractiveness Markets as Markets of Attention and Valorization
106(2)
The Cultural Economization of the Economy and Society
108(3)
Overproduction and Winner-Take-All Competitions
111(3)
Buzz Effects and the Struggle for Visibility
114(4)
Valorization Techniques and Reputation
118(2)
Singularity Capital
120(4)
Quantifying the Unique
124(7)
III The Singularization of the Working World
The Cultural Economization of Labor and Its Polarization
131(4)
1 Practices of Labor and Organization in the Creative Economy
135(10)
Cultural Production as Creative Labor
135(3)
Projects as Heterogeneous Collaborations
138(3)
Organizational Cultures and Networks
141(4)
2 The Singularization and Self-Singularization of Working Subjects
145(18)
Beyond the Formalization of Labor
145(2)
The Profile Subject: Competencies and Talents
147(3)
Labor as Performance
150(3)
The Singularization Techniques of Labor
153(3)
Fields of Tension in Highly Qualified Labor: Between the Artist's Dilemma and the Superstar Economy
156(7)
IV Digitalization as Singularization: The Rise of the Culture Machine
From Industrial Technics to Digital Technology
163(3)
1 The Technology of Culturalization
166(10)
Algorithms, Digitality, and the Internet as Infrastructures
166(2)
The Digital Culture Machine and the Ubiquity of Culture
168(4)
Culture Between Overproduction and Recombination
172(4)
2 Cultural and Automated Processes of Singularization
176(23)
The Digital Subject: Performative Authenticity and Visibility
177(2)
Compositional Singularity and the Form of the Profile
179(4)
Big Data and the Observation of Profiles
183(3)
The Personalized Internet and Softwarization
186(2)
Digital Neo-Communities and the Sociality of the Internet
188(3)
Fields of Tension in Online Culture: From the Pressure to Create Profiles to Extreme Affect Culture
191(8)
V The Singularistic Life: Lifestyles, Classes, Subject Forms
The Late-Modern Self Beyond the Leveled Middle-Class Society
199(2)
The Cultural Class Divide and the "Paternoster-Elevator Effect"
201(6)
1 The Lifestyle of the New Middle Class: Successful Self-Actualization
207(17)
Romanticism and Bourgeois Culture: The New Symbiosis
207(3)
Self-Actualization and the Valorization of Everyday Life
210(4)
The Curated Life
214(2)
Culture as a Resource and Cultural Cosmopolitanism
216(3)
Status Investment and the Prestige of the Unique
219(5)
2 Elements of the Singularistic Lifestyle
224(28)
Food
225(3)
Homes
228(4)
Travel
232(3)
Bodies
235(3)
Parenting and Early Education
238(4)
Work-Life Balance, Urbanity, Juvenilization, Degendering, and New Liberalism
242(4)
Fields of Tension in the Lifestyle of the New Middle Class: The Inadequacy of Self-Actualization
246(6)
3 The Culturalization of Inequality
252(17)
The Underclass's Way of Life: Muddling Through
252(3)
Cultural Devaluations
255(3)
Singularistic Counter-Strategies of the Underclass
258(3)
The Tableau of Late-Modern Classes and Their Relations
261(8)
VI Differential Liberalism and Cultural Essentialism: The Transformation of the Political
The Politics of the Particular
269(3)
1 Apertistic-Differential Liberalism and the Politics of the Local
272(14)
From the Social-Democratic Consensus to New Liberalism
272(2)
The Competition State and Diversity: The Two Sides of New Liberalism
274(3)
The Politics of Cities I: New Urbanism and the Global Attractiveness Competition
277(4)
The Politics of Cities II: Culturally Oriented Governmentality and Singularity Management
281(5)
2 The Rise of Cultural Essentialism
286(24)
Collective Identities and Particular Neo-Communities
286(5)
Ethnic Communities Between Self-Culturalization and External Culturalization
291(3)
Cultural Nationalism
294(2)
Religious Fundamentalism
296(3)
Right-Wing Populism
299(2)
Cultural Conflicts Between Essentialism, Hyperculture, and Liberalism
301(4)
The Politics of Violence: Terrorism and Mass Shootings as Celebrations of the Singular Act
305(5)
Conclusion: The Crisis of the General? 310(10)
Notes 320(51)
Bibliography 371(27)
Index 398
Andreas Reckwitz is Professor of Cultural Sociology at the European University Viadrina, Frankfurt an der Oder.