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Care of the World [electronic resource] : Fear, Responsibility and Justice in the Global Age / by Elena Pulcini.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Studies in Global Justice ; 11Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 2013Description: XI, 272 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9789400744820
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 320.01 23
LOC classification:
  • B65
Online resources:
Contents:
Translator’s note -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The ambivalence of globalization -- Part One Pathologies of the Global Age: unlimited individualism, endogamous communitarianism -- Unlimited individualism -- 2. Endogamous communitarianism -- Part Two Pathologies of Feeling: the metamorphosis of fear in the global age -- 1. Modernity and fear -- 2. Risk society: From Fear to Anxiety? -- 3. Spectators and victims: between denial and projection -- Part Three Responsibility and Care of the World -- 1. Actors: relearning to fear -- 2. From fear to care -- 3. A world in common -- Part Four Care and Justice -- 1. Care versus justice? -- 2. The passions of justice -- 3. Beyond justice.-Index.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book proposes a philosophy of care in a global age. It discusses the distinguishing and opposing pathologies produced by globalization: unlimited individualism or self-obsession, manifested as (Promethean) omnipotence and (narcissistic) indifference, and endogamous communitarianism or an ‘us’-obsession that results in conflict and violence. The polarization between a lack and an excess of pathos is reflected in the distorted forms taken on by fear. The book advocates a metamorphosis of fear, which may restore in the subject an awareness of vulnerability and become the precondition for moral action. Such awareness and the recognition of the condition of contamination caused by the other’s unavoidable presence teach us to fear for rather than be afraid of. Fear for the world means care of the world, and care, understood as concern and solicitude, is a new notion of responsibility, in which the stress is shifted to a relational subject capable of responding to and taking care of the other. From a global perspective, the proposed vision of care also compels us to explore a new paradigm of justice. .
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Translator’s note -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The ambivalence of globalization -- Part One Pathologies of the Global Age: unlimited individualism, endogamous communitarianism -- Unlimited individualism -- 2. Endogamous communitarianism -- Part Two Pathologies of Feeling: the metamorphosis of fear in the global age -- 1. Modernity and fear -- 2. Risk society: From Fear to Anxiety? -- 3. Spectators and victims: between denial and projection -- Part Three Responsibility and Care of the World -- 1. Actors: relearning to fear -- 2. From fear to care -- 3. A world in common -- Part Four Care and Justice -- 1. Care versus justice? -- 2. The passions of justice -- 3. Beyond justice.-Index.

This book proposes a philosophy of care in a global age. It discusses the distinguishing and opposing pathologies produced by globalization: unlimited individualism or self-obsession, manifested as (Promethean) omnipotence and (narcissistic) indifference, and endogamous communitarianism or an ‘us’-obsession that results in conflict and violence. The polarization between a lack and an excess of pathos is reflected in the distorted forms taken on by fear. The book advocates a metamorphosis of fear, which may restore in the subject an awareness of vulnerability and become the precondition for moral action. Such awareness and the recognition of the condition of contamination caused by the other’s unavoidable presence teach us to fear for rather than be afraid of. Fear for the world means care of the world, and care, understood as concern and solicitude, is a new notion of responsibility, in which the stress is shifted to a relational subject capable of responding to and taking care of the other. From a global perspective, the proposed vision of care also compels us to explore a new paradigm of justice. .

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