F. S. Michaels
Auteur de Monoculture: How One Story is Changing Everything
1 oeuvres 190 utilisateurs 31 critiques 1 Favoris
Œuvres de F. S. Michaels
Étiqueté
#prince-pdf (1)
11 in 11 (2)
2011 (3)
74/6 R (1)
A lire (50)
Anthropologie (6)
canadien (4)
Capitalisme (2)
critique sociale (5)
Critiques en avant-première (8)
Culture (14)
entered-to-win (1)
Goodreads (3)
hist-soci-cultstud (1)
Juin 2011 (2)
June 2012 (1)
Kindle (6)
Livre électronique (4)
Lu (5)
lu en 2011 (5)
maybe-to-read-but-not-in-clan (1)
monoculture; nonfiction (1)
non-fiction (27)
Philosophie (2)
Politique (4)
Psychologie (9)
Réflexion (2)
Science (2)
Sciences humaines et sociales (2)
Sciences économiques (17)
Septembre 2011 (1)
Sociologie (6)
Société (2)
to-read and worth-a-look (1)
to-read-shortlist (1)
Topic: Humanities (1)
want-to-read-nonfiction (1)
ways of being wrong (1)
world-changing (3)
Études culturelles (2)
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 20th Century
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- Canada
Membres
Critiques
Monoculture: How One Story is Changing Everything par F.S. Michaels
This book definitely hasn't met my expectations. The topic of the monoculture is huge but Michaels fails in building a real theory of it. She never approaches the theoretical level one should expect from this type of book. She ends up just exploring one monoculture, the economic monoculture we live in. It's the most important now, fore sure, but I also would have liked the exploration of past (or maybe not Western) monocultures. Besides this, nothing she says in this book sounds new or fresh, everything sounds over-simplified and she never gets to the deepness of thought one could expect (for instance, when she writes about sanity system she never gets close, not even a little, to what said on the topic by great thinkers like Ivan Illich). And when she gets to the pars construens things get even worse: everything she is able to do is mentioning 3 examples: the Slow Food movement, Christopher Alexander's pattern language, and Marshall Rosenberg's Nonviolent Communication. Again, I was expecting more.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
d.v. | 30 autres critiques | May 16, 2023 | I was surprised at how much I liked this little book, though the implications of the economic culture which it describes is thoroughly depressing. It's not a terribly academic work, though there are plenty of citations and resources for further reading, but rather a simply presented and argued look at how the economic story has permeated so many facets of everyday existence.
Signalé
resoundingjoy | 30 autres critiques | Jan 1, 2021 | This review was deleted following Amazon's purchase of GoodReads.
The review can still be viewed via LibraryThing, where my profile can be found here.
I'm also in the process of building a database at Booklikes, where I can be found here.
If you read/liked/clicked through to see this review here on GR, many thanks.… (plus d'informations)
The review can still be viewed via LibraryThing, where my profile can be found here.
I'm also in the process of building a database at Booklikes, where I can be found here.
If you read/liked/clicked through to see this review here on GR, many thanks.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
buriedinprint | 30 autres critiques | Jun 14, 2017 | Monoculture by F.S. Michaels looks at how the unwritten and unspoken dominant culture of an area can shape the lives of the people within that culture. She argues that the current monoculture of the developed world is money — or more broadly the worth of things and actions.
Michaels outlines her argument around these key areas: work, relationship with others, relationships with the world, education, physical health, mental health, communities, and creativity. Against each of these areas of the human condition she tests her thesis.
A monoculture, as it is unwritten, doesn't mean the same thing for everyone. It doesn't turn people into sheep or lemmings, but it can affect lives through government policies and personal choices. Enlightenment, though, can help a person or an entire community break free from the invisible, assumed bonds of the monoculture.
It's a short, quick and fascinating book. I've since passed along my review copy to my friends to read.
I received a copy from the author for review.… (plus d'informations)
Michaels outlines her argument around these key areas: work, relationship with others, relationships with the world, education, physical health, mental health, communities, and creativity. Against each of these areas of the human condition she tests her thesis.
A monoculture, as it is unwritten, doesn't mean the same thing for everyone. It doesn't turn people into sheep or lemmings, but it can affect lives through government policies and personal choices. Enlightenment, though, can help a person or an entire community break free from the invisible, assumed bonds of the monoculture.
It's a short, quick and fascinating book. I've since passed along my review copy to my friends to read.
I received a copy from the author for review.… (plus d'informations)
Signalé
pussreboots | 30 autres critiques | Jul 10, 2013 | Prix et récompenses
Vous aimerez peut-être aussi
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 1
- Membres
- 190
- Popularité
- #114,774
- Évaluation
- 3.2
- Critiques
- 31
- ISBN
- 2
- Favoris
- 1