Civilization and the Human Subject
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:8th Sep '99
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Recent debates have highlighted the importance of the self to a better understanding of the nature of culture and its relation to power. In his new book, John Mandalios incorporates the current 'postmodern' debate on these issues with a deeper, philosophical exploration of identity and cultural formation, and the dynamics of social power underlying them. He takes up identity formation within an analysis of the historical, social, political, religious, and psychoanalytical dimensions of civilized life that can be traced back to the classical world. Questions ordinarily associated with the 'postmodern condition'_otherness, fragmentation, power, the situated self, disciplinary practices, and multiplicity_are related to the problematic of human subjectivity and how civilized modes of conduct of the self cannot simply be explained by national cultural traditions. Mandalios argues that self-identity is not reducible to the effects of globalization or power or any one single collective identity representation. The self is enveloped within a complex which requires a 'civilization-analytic' perspective into the world and the inner life.
...interesting and original book... * Sociology *
A pathbreaking book. . . . Mandalios makes a major contribution to what can broadly speaking be called civilizational analysis. . . . The specific perspective that Mandalios brings to bear on the civilizational issue, including intercivilizational encounters, revolves around the envelopment of the self by multiple civilizational processes. Mandalios takes great care in emphasizing that these multiple processes preceded by many centuries the period of late modernity that is so frequently discussed these days in connection with self-identity. -- Roland Robertson, University of Pittsburgh
ISBN: 9780847691777
Dimensions: 231mm x 150mm x 12mm
Weight: 299g
220 pages