Honor: A Phenomenology
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:11th Sep '14
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£150.00(9780415532266)
Honor is misunderstood in the social sciences. The literature lacks both accuracy and precision in its conceptual development such that we no longer say what we mean because we have no idea what we’re saying. We use many terms to mean honor and mean many different ideas when we refer to honor.
Honor: A Phenomenology is designed to fix all of these problems. A ground-breaking examination of honor as a metaphenomenon, this book incorporates various structures of social control including prestige, face, shame and affiliated honor and the rejection of said structures by dignified individuals and groups. It shows honor to be a concept that encompasses a number of processes that operate together in order to structure society. Honor is how we are inscribed with social value by others and the means by which we inscribe others with social honor. Because it is the means by which individuals fit in and function with society, the main divisions internal (within the psyche of the individual and external (within the norms and institutions of society). Honor is the glue that holds groups together and the wedge that forces them apart; it defines who is us and who them. It accounts for the continuity and change in socio-political systems.
"Robert Oprisko’s book is a brilliant exercise in political theory. Remarkably ambitious in its scope, this phenomenological analysis of honor in social reality draws on a wide range of sources from both analytic and continental traditions in philosophy and political theory in a systematic treatment of various dimensions of both internal and external honor. The book succeeds admirably in demonstrating the way the relational processes of claiming, granting, and withdrawing honor are participants in the construction and transformation of social reality, restoring honor as the central concept of political theory."
—Sergei Prozorov, University of Helsinki
"Oprisko celebrates the ways that honor is constitutive of our lives in ways both public and private; it is both the stuff of politics and the source of subversion and rebellion, the basis for our personal sense of dignity and a way that we judge, and rank, one another. Oprisko offers us a fascinating and superbly rigorous reading of honor; in discussions ranging from the Illiad to engagements with contemporary political theory, theories of intersectionality and ontology and much more, he has accomplished a truly important and worthy work."
—James Martel , San Francisco State University
ISBN: 9781138833067
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 317g
210 pages