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The Anthropological Paradox Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)

The Anthropological Paradox By Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)

The Anthropological Paradox by Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)


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Summary

This book takes up a general anthropological paradox that has always marked the human animal: bound by its own biological constitution to fend off disorder by drawing the boundaries of an artificial niche and to expose itself to unlimited contingency precisely in order to find a truly suitable environment.

The Anthropological Paradox Summary

The Anthropological Paradox: Niches, Micro-worlds and Psychic Dissociation by Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)

This book addresses how the erosion of traditional forms of political association and legal regulation has given rise to a pluralism of imperfect communities constantly exposed to the risk of dissolution. These are niches and micro-worlds that are connected through precarious and ambivalent ties. Such a far-reaching transformation affects at one and the same time both our psychic and social identity. The book argues that this phenomenon is linked to the proliferation of new forms of psychic disorder - depression, personality disorder, dissociation - typical of hypermodern societies. However, while these can easily turn into genuine disorders, they can also open onto richer forms of identity, more complex than those of the past. Based on this analysis, the book's main claim is that this dynamic epitomizes a general anthropological paradox - one that has always marked the human animal: humans are bound by their own biological constitution to fend off disorder by drawing the boundaries of artificial niches, and yet they are inclined to expose themselves to unlimited contingency so that they can find a truly suitable environment.

Pursuing a novel understanding of the apparent collapse of traditional juridico-political settings, this book makes the case that the emergence of dissociations at several levels - individual, social, political, legal - does not stem from a lack of political imagination. Rather, it is a situation with which humans are inevitably confronted: a perennial tension between the limited and the unlimited, between the desire to take refuge and the desire to cross borders.

The Anthropological Paradox Reviews

This study, being both erudite and engagingly written, will likely broaden the intellectual horizons of readers interested in Carnival studies, and-more generically-in the study of rituality at the interface between anthropology, folklore, and history.

Francisco Vaz da Silva, Lisbon University Institute, Lisbon, Portugal

About Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)

Massimo De Carolis is Full Professor of Political Philosophy and Social Philosophy at the University of Salerno, where he is the head of the Laboratory of Studies and Research on Human Nature. Among his most recent books: La vita nell'epoca della sua riproducibilita tecnica (Life in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility: 2004) and Il rovescio della liberta. Tramonto del neoliberalismo e disagio della civilta (The Downside of Freedom. The Twilight of Neoliberalism and Civilisation's Discontent, 2017).

Table of Contents

Preface to the english edition; Introduction; Chapter 1: Niches Chapter 2: Psychopathology of present-day life Chapter 3: The grey area between fact and fiction Chapter 4: Different ways of building a world Chapter 5: Anthropology of pluralism

Additional information

NLS9780367348922
9780367348922
0367348926
The Anthropological Paradox: Niches, Micro-worlds and Psychic Dissociation by Massimo De Carolis (University of Salerno, Italy)
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2019-09-05
118
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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