De som köpt den här boken har ofta också köpt The Courage To Be Disliked av Ichiro Kishimi, Fumitake Koga (häftad).
Köp båda 2 för 763 kr"The book consists of profiles of 15 American intellectuals of the 1950s who created the groundwork for new forms of critical discourse. . . . Among these 'academic outlaws' are C. Wright Mills, Hannah Arendt, Erich Fromm, Lewis Mumford, Rachel Carson and Margaret Mead, all whom occupied disciplinary borderlands, questioned the terms of mass culture and championed intellectual independence and political engagement. . . . The profiles are succinct, colorful and instructive. The book testifies persuasively to the power cultural myths have to shape public life and the role demythologizers can play in reawakening critical consciousness."--"Washington Post Book World
Andrew Jamison and Ron Eyerman are American scholars at Lund University in Sweden. They have published two books together, The Making of the New Environmental Consciousness (1990) and Social Movements: A Cognitive Approach (1991). Ron Eyerman is also an editor of Intellectuals, Universities, and the State in Western Modern Societies (California, 1987).
Preface 1 REINVENTING PARTISANSHIP 2 MASS SOCIETY AND ITS CRITICS: C. Wright Mills, Hannah Arendt, Erich Fromm 3 THE ECOLOGICAL INTELLECTUALS Fairfield Osborn, Lewis Mumford, Rachel Carson 4 SHAPING NEW KINDS OF KNOWLEDGE Leo Szilard, Herbert Marcuse, Margaret Mead 5. THE RECONCEPTUALIZATION OF CULTURE: Allen Ginsberg, James Baldwin, Mary McCarthy 6 MAKING POLITICS PERSONAL Saul Alinsky, Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King, Jr. 7 CONCLUSION: Taking Sides in the Fifties References Index