Results for ' new middle class'

976 found
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  1.  16
    The New Middle Classes: Their Culture and Life Styles.Joseph Bensman - 1970 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 4 (1):23.
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  2.  32
    Japan's New Middle Class; The Salary Man and His Family in a Tokyo Suburb.E. H. S. & Ezra F. Vogel - 1963 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 83 (4):526.
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  3.  52
    The discovery of the new middle class.Val Burris - 1986 - Theory and Society 15 (3):317-349.
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  4. Caring Capitalism: A New Middle-Class Base for the Welfare State.Ronald Glassman - 2001 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 14 (1):114-129.
  5.  23
    Postmodernism and the New Middle Class.Hans-Georg Betz - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (2):93-114.
  6.  17
    Japan's New Middle Class.William B. Hauser & Ezra F. Vogel - 1975 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 95 (1):125.
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  7.  45
    Marxism and the new middle classes.George Ross - 1978 - Theory and Society 5 (2):163-190.
  8.  26
    Does Practice Theory Work? Reckwitz’s Study of the ‘New Middle Class’ as an Example.Andreas Pettenkofer - 2022 - Analyse & Kritik 44 (2):279-304.
    ‘Practice theory’—a theory program that connects the goal of offering non-rationalist explanations to a strong focus on everyday routine activities, and builds on the work of Bourdieu but tries to gain a less narrow perspective—is being used more and more widely in the social sciences. Its advocates often argue that, since practice theory is a heuristic for doing empirical work, discussing it without addressing this empirical work cannot do justice to it. Therefore, this article analyses Reckwitz’s recently translated book on (...)
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  9.  12
    Upper Middle Class Social Reproduction: Wealth, Schooling, and Residential Choice in Chile.María Luisa Méndez - 2018 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan. Edited by Modesto Gayo.
    In the contemporary context of increasing inequality and various forms of segregation, this volume analyzes the transition to neoliberal politics in Santiago de Chile. Using an innovative methodological approach that combines georeferenced data and multi-stage cluster analysis, Méndez and Gayo study the old and new mechanisms of social reproduction among the upper middle class. In so doing, they not only capture the interconnections between macro- and microsocial dimensions such as urban dynamics, schooling demands, cultural repertoires and socio-spatial trajectories, (...)
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  10.  22
    The Dynamics of Class and the “New Middle Class”.Chris Starrs - 1983 - Social Theory and Practice 9 (1):85-114.
  11.  99
    The `Other' Postmodern Tourism: Culture, Travel and the New Middle Classes.Ian Munt - 1994 - Theory, Culture and Society 11 (3):101-123.
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  12.  17
    Il feticcio middle-class e le scienze sociali fra ordine liberal e neoliberale negli Stati Uniti.Matteo Battistini - 2017 - Scienza and Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine 29 (57).
    In the United States, the crisis broke out in 2008 launched a public debate on the decline of the middle class with peculiar historical references: from the Great Depression and the New Deal to the globalization of the Nineties, through the fractures imposed by the social movements of the Sixties and the neo-liberal turn of the Eighties. In the light of a debate in which the middle class emerges as an indisputable keyword of the American political (...)
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  13.  57
    The Australian Middle Class and the Asia-Pacific Century.Bill Martin - 1998 - Thesis Eleven 55 (1):61-82.
    In what directions is the Australian `new' middle class developing as we move towards the `Asia-Pacific century'? This paper reviews the basic structural features of the group during most of the 20th century, and suggests that a number of the arrangements which had delivered high status, material privileges and security to the group are becoming increasingly problematic. It examines evidence of the growing importance of Asian opportunities to the Australian middle class, and indications of responses to (...)
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  14.  10
    Contested Capital: Rural Middle Classes in India: Rural Middle Classes in India.Maryam Aslany - 2020 - Cambridge University Press.
    The expansion and transformation of Asian economies is producing class structures, roles and identities that could not easily be predicted from other times and places. The industrialisation of the countryside, in particular, generates new, rural middle classes which straddle the worlds of agriculture and industry in complex ways. Their class position is improvised on the basis of numerous influences and opportunities, and is in constant evolution. Enormous though its total population is, meanwhile, the rural middle (...) remains invisible to most scholars and policymakers. Contested Capital is the first major work to shed light on an emerging transnational class comprised of many hundreds of millions of people. In India, the 'middle class' has become one of the key categories of economic analysis and developmental forecasting. The discussion suffers from one major oversight: it assumes that the middle class resides uniquely in the cities. As this book demonstrates, however, more than a third of India's middle class is rural, and 17 per cent of rural households belong to the middle class. The book brings this vast and dynamic population into view, so confronting some of the most crucial neglected questions of the contemporary global economy. (shrink)
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  15.  19
    Low-Carbon Transition as Vehicle of New Inequalities? Risk-Class, the Chinese Middle-Class and the Moral Economy of Misrecognition.Dean Curran & David Tyfield - 2020 - Theory, Culture and Society 37 (2):131-156.
    Low-carbon innovation is usually depicted as an exemplar of pursuit of the common good, in both mainstream policy discussion and the emerging orthodoxy of transition studies. Yet it may emerge as a key means of intensifying inequality. We analyse low-carbon innovation as a social and political process through the prism of differential risk-classes, focusing on the pivotal global case of emergence of the Chinese middle-class in seaboard megacities, especially regarding the profound challenges of urban e-mobility transition. This approach (...)
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  16.  36
    The Ethics and Economics of Middle Class Romance: Wollstonecraft and Smith on Love in Commercial Society.Roos Slegers - 2021 - The Journal of Ethics 25 (4):525-542.
    This article shows the philosophical kinship between Adam Smith and Mary Wollstonecraft on the subject of love. Though the two major 18th century thinkers are not traditionally brought into conversation with each other, Wollstonecraft and Smith share deep moral concerns about the emerging commercial society. As the new middle class continues to grow along with commerce, vanity becomes an ever more common vice among its members. But a vain person is preoccupied with appearance, status, and flattery—things that get (...)
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  17.  5
    Book Review: Family Men: Middle-Class Fatherhood in Early Industrializing America. By Shawn Johansen. New York: Routledge, 2001, 249 pp., $80.00 (cloth), $21.99 (paper). [REVIEW]Ralph LaRossa - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (2):330-331.
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  18.  71
    Aristotle, Diderot, liberalism and the idea of 'middle class': A comparision of two contexts of emergence of a metaphorical formation.Ezequiel Adamovsky - 2005 - History of Political Thought 26 (2):303-333.
    This article seeks to contribute to the history of the idea of 'middle class', an idea that was fundamental to Aristotle's philosophy but disappeared from the repertoire of political thinking for centuries, re-emerging shortly before the French Revolution to be developed by Diderot and other French liberals. The modern notion of 'middle class' is compared with that of Aristotle, and the similarities between the two contexts of emergence -- the crisis of Ancient Greek democracy and that (...)
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  19.  9
    Mobility Patterns and Experiences of the Middle Classes in a Globalizing Age: The Case of Mexican Migrants in Australia.Vazquez Maggio & Monica Laura - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    The book presents insights from a mixed methodology study that examines recent mobility patterns exhibited by the middle classes. Its major contributions are two-fold: theoretically, it advances the conceptualisation of middle class migration; empirically, it analyses the migratory motivations of a relatively new Latin-American group in Australia. The accelerated insertion of the Mexican society into globalisation processes is strongly linked not only to the growing participation in migration phenomena but also to people's outflow to new destinations. Although (...)
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  20.  14
    Book Review: Cradle of the Middle Class. The Family in Oneida County, New York, 1790–1865. [REVIEW]Catherine Hall - 1982 - Feminist Review 10 (1):104-107.
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  21.  25
    Book Review: Reinsuring Health: Why More Middle-Class People are Uninsured and What Government Can DoReinsuring Health: Why More Middle-Class People Are Uninsured and What Government Can Do. By SwartzKatherine. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. 2006. 224 pp. $24.95. [REVIEW]Bryan Dowd - 2006 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 43 (3):298-300.
  22.  78
    Khaleeji-Capital: Class-Formation and Regional Integration in the Middle-East Gulf.Adam Hanieh - 2010 - Historical Materialism 18 (2):35-76.
    The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council are most typically understood from the perspective of their position as the world’s key oil- and gas-producing states. This essay explores the largely-overlooked processes of class-formation in the GCC, and argues that very profound tendencies of capital-internationalisation are occurring alongside Gulf regional integration. The circuits of capital are increasingly cast at the pan-Gulf scale, and a capitalist class – described as khaleeji-capital – is emerging around the accumulation-opportunities presented within the new (...)
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  23.  11
    La New Class del neoconservatorismo e la de/legittimazione del capitalismo americano.Matteo Battistini - 2019 - Scienza and Politica. Per Una Storia Delle Dottrine 31 (61).
    Il saggio presenta il dibattito statunitense sulla new class quale categoria politica che ha fatto da perno all’ascesa del neoconservatorismo, alla scrittura pubblica del discorso dei neoconservatori – in particolare Daniel P. Moynihan e Irving Kristol – e alla loro strategia volta ad aggredire le fondamenta scientifiche e politiche dell’ordine liberal del capitalismo americano che fra anni Sessanta e Settanta non trovava più nella middle class la parola pubblica che aveva messo a riposo il conflitto sociale e (...)
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  24. Darby lewes.class='Hi'>Middle-Class Edens - 1993 - Utopian Studies 4 (1):14.
  25.  55
    Realism, deconstruction and the feminist standpoint.Caroline New - 1998 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 28 (4):349–372.
    Feminist Standpoint Theory claims that by virtue of their social positioning women have access to, or can achieve, particular and/or better knowledge of gendered social relations. The epistemology, various versions of which are reviewed in the paper, has been criticised for over homogenising women. In its simplest form this critique claims that women’s diversity rules out communality and collective interests, and that FST unawarely takes white middle class Western women as representative. In its stronger, postructuralist form this critique (...)
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  26.  29
    The Tourist: A New Theory of the Leisure Class.Dean MacCannell - 2013 - University of California Press.
    In this classic analysis of travel and sightseeing, author Dean MacCannell brings social scientific understandings to bear on tourism in the postindustrial age, during which the middle class has acquired leisure time for international travel. In _The Tourist_—now with a new introduction framing it as part of a broader contemporary social and cultural analysis—the author examines notions of authenticity, high and low culture, and the construction of social reality around tourism.
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  27.  7
    (2 other versions)The Middle Works of John Dewey, Volume 5, 1899-1924: Ethics, 1908.Jo Ann Boydston (ed.) - 1978 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    This_ _fifth volume of the Middle Works contains _Ethics _by John Dewey and his former colleague at the University of Michigan, James H. Tufts, which ap­peared as one of the last in the Holt American Science series of textbooks. Within some six months after publica­tion, _Ethics _was adopted as a textbook by thirty colleges. The book continued to be extremely popular and widely used, and was reprinted twenty-five times before both authors completely revised their respective parts for the new (...)
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  28. Adrian costache.Toward A. New class='Hi'>Middle Ages & on Aurel Codoban - 2011 - Journal for Communication and Culture 1 (2):163.
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  29.  17
    Square Scientists and the Excluded Middle.Cyrus C. M. Mody - 2017 - Centaurus 59 (1-2):58-71.
    The historiography on American science and technology in the 1970s is still small, yet there are already three distinct strands of work: studies of countercultural scientists, portrayed as enacting or advocating ‘groovy’ research; studies of the politically polarized debate pitting conservative and libertarian ‘cornucopianists’ against environmentalists and modelers forecasting resource scarcity; and studies of the early commercialization of technoscience (e.g., biotechnology) that took off in the 1980s. Left out, I argue, are a class of ‘square scientists’ with little sympathy (...)
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  30. Using a mobile Virtual Reality and computer game to improve visuospatial self-efficacy in middle school students.Irina Kuznetcova, Michael Glassman, Shantanu Tilak, Ziye Wen, Marvin Evans, Logan Pelfrey & Tzu-Jung Lin - 2022 - Computers and Education 192.
    Visuospatial (VS) skills, or one’s ability to mentally manipulate spatial information about objects, are critical to STEM enrollment, retention, and achievement. Low level of VS skills may deter some people from joining the STEM workforce or complicate their learning experience. While there is plenty of evidence suggesting that VS skills can be improved through training, few accessible training programs exist as of now, particularly for younger students. The current study proposes a new direction of VS training focusing on the development (...)
     
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  31. Busyness as the badge of honor for the new superordinate working class.Jonathan Gershuny - 2005 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 72 (2):287-314.
    “Busyness” plainly relates to externally observable work or leisure activities, but nevertheless the state itself is entirely subjective. I will argue in what follows, that there may have been fundamental changes in the connection between the external circumstances of work and leisure and internal feelings of “busyness”. Through the last century there have been fundamental shifts in the relationship between the pattern of daily activities, and patterns of societal sub- and superordination. “Are you busy?” may have had a quite different (...)
     
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  32.  13
    Robotics-Driven Activities: Can They Improve Middle School Science Learning?Mike Robinson - 2005 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 25 (1):73-84.
    This study used case studies from three science teachers to compare three groups of students studying Grade 8 physics using Robolab instead of traditional lab materials. The three teachers represented an English as a second language class, a regular class with many English language learner students, and a Mathematics, Engineering, Science Achievement class of afterschool volunteer students. The teachers responded to nine questions regarding issues such as how robotics addresses the middle school physics standards, promotes inquiry (...)
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  33.  15
    The Idea of the Vernacular: An Anthology of Middle English Literary Theory, 1280-1520.Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Nicholas Watson, Andrew Taylor & Ruth Evans - 1999 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    This pioneering anthology of Middle English prologues and other excerpts from texts written between 1280 and 1520 is one of the largest collections of vernacular literary theory from the Middle Ages yet published and the first to focus attention on English literary theory before the sixteenth century. It edits, introduces, and glosses some sixty excerpts, all of which reflect on the problems and opportunities associated with writing in the "mother tongue" during a period of revolutionary change for the (...)
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  34.  31
    Elusive revolt.Cihan Tuğal - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 130 (1):74-95.
    What lies behind the amalgam of liberalism, elitism, anti-capitalism, and fascistic elements in today’s street politics? This essay analyzes this mixture in light of the shifting class locations of middle strata. Intensified business dominance has not only proletarianized some middle strata but has led to a dry life for even the privileged ones. Middle classes are now taking to the streets to reclaim their specialness. Their exact agendas might not be identical throughout the globe, but a (...)
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  35. Plato’s Metaphysical Development before Middle Period Dialogues.Mohammad Bagher Ghomi - manuscript
    Regarding the relation of Plato’s early and middle period dialogues, scholars have been divided to two opposing groups: unitarists and developmentalists. While developmentalists try to prove that there are some noticeable and even fundamental differences between Plato’s early and middle period dialogues, the unitarists assert that there is no essential difference in there. The main goal of this article is to suggest that some of Plato’s ontological as well as epistemological principles change, both radically and fundamentally, between the (...)
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  36.  53
    “I Am Not a Hijra”: Class, Respectability, and the Emergence of the “New” Transgender Woman in India.Liz Mount - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (4):620-647.
    This article examines the mutual imbrication of gender and class that shapes how some transgender women seek incorporation into social hierarchies in postcolonial India. Existing literature demonstrates an association between transgender and middle-class-status in the global South. Through an 18-month ethnographic study in Bangalore from 2009 through 2016 with transgender women, NGO workers and activists, as well as textual analyses of media representations, I draw on “new woman” archetypes to argue that the discourses of empowerment and respectability (...)
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  37.  52
    “Casting off the coat of Konrad”: Polish intelligentsia in the era of system transformation.Hanna Palska - 2009 - Studies in East European Thought 61 (4):249-269.
    This article outlines the means of adaptation by the Polish intelligentsia to the conditions of a free-market system. The ethos of the Polish intelligentsia is at a fundamental level in conflict with the ethos of the middle class. Research conducted in the 1990s into social stratification in Poland clearly showed that it was the intelligentsia that was claiming the best new employment positions that “opened up” along with the market and democracy. Nonetheless, sociologists consider changes in consciousness to (...)
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  38.  43
    The third Ukraine: A case of civic nationalism.Yaroslav Hrytsak - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (4):674-687.
    To some extent, the current Russian-Ukrainian may be described as a conflict between two visions of nation, respectively, ethnic and civic models. Putin believes that a language defines a nation. In his understanding, since many Ukrainians are Russian speakers, they are Russians. His perception of Ukraine is anachronistic. He has failed to notice Ukraine's radical transformation since it gained independence. The current Ukrainian identity has a strong civic component. Its core is represented by a new urban middle class (...)
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  39. Société de Classe Et Psychanalyse.Claudiu Gaiu - 2019 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:245-257.
    Class Society and Psychoanalysis. Despite being sidelined, Michel Clouscard was a prolific writer and taught sociology at the Université de Poitiers from 1975 to 1990. Clouscard focused on describing the peculiar discourse of emancipation that resulted from the marriage of psychoanalysis and Marxism, which was then termed Freudo-Marxism, and was gaining currency in the aftermath of May ’68. For Clouscard, the emancipation of desire and productivity upheld by the Freudo-Marxists went hand-in-hand with the emergence of new markets and techno-structures (...)
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  40. New media, new publics: Reconfiguring the public sphere of Islam.Jon W. Anderson - 2003 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 70 (3):887-906.
    Modern information technologies, beginning with the fax and audiocassettes but now exemplified in satellite television and the Internet, have opened the public discourse of Islam to new voices and, more subtlely, to new practices. While media-savvy militants draw the attention of outside observers, a quieter drama is unfolding. Pious middle classes are extending conventional patterns of seeking out religious guidance into new channels, particularly the Internet; the continuous search for role models and reference groups is meeting increasingly modern ways (...)
     
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  41.  28
    Rubbing Elbows and Blowing Smoke: Gender, Class, and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Patent Office.Kara W. Swanson - 2017 - Isis 108 (1):40-61.
    The United States Patent Office of the 1850s offers a rare opportunity to analyze the early gendering of science. In its crowded rooms, would-be scientists shared a workplace with women earning equal pay for equal work. Scientific men worked as patent examiners, claiming this new occupation as scientific in opposition to those seeking to separate science and technology. At the same time, in an unprecedented and ultimately unsuccessful experiment, female clerks were hired to work alongside male clerks. This article examines (...)
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  42. Against postmodernism: a Marxist critique.Alex Callinicos - 1990 - New York, N.Y.: St. Martin's Press.
    It has become an intellectual commonplace to claim that we have entered the era of 'postmodernity'. Three themes are embraced in this claim the poststructurist critique by Foucault, Derrida and others of the philosophical heritage of the Enlightenment the supposed impasse of High Modern art and its replacement by new artistic forms and the alleged emergence of 'post-industrial' societies whose structures are beyond the ken of Marx and other theorists of industrial capitalism. Against Postmodernism takes issue with all these themes. (...)
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  43.  13
    Modernity and capitalist progress in the periphery: The Brazilian case.Leda Maria Paulani - 2016 - European Journal of Social Theory 19 (2):210-227.
    The aim of this article is to show the peculiarities of modernity in a peripheral capitalist country like Brazil. To do this, our understanding of modernity and its relationship with capitalist progress will be explained. Subsequently, the particular character of capitalism in peripheral regions, with an emphasis on the Brazilian experience, will be analysed. More specifically, we shall explore the meaning of capitalist progress in Brazil in the last two decades, underlining Brazil’s role as an international platform for financial valorization (...)
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  44.  39
    Allegory and sexual ethics in the High Middle Ages.Noah D. Guynn - 2007 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Guynn offers an innovative new approach to the ethical, cultural, and ideological analysis of medieval allegory. Working between poststructuralism and historical materialism, he considers both the playfulness of allegory (its openness to multiple interpretations and perspectives) and its disciplinary force (the use of rhetoric to naturalize hegemonies and suppress difference and dissent). Ultimately, he argues that both tendencies can be linked to the consolidation of power within ruling class institutions and the persecution of demonized others, notably women and sexual (...)
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  45.  15
    Agalev en Ecolo als links-libertaire partijen : Of de partijpolitieke vertaling van een nieuwe breuklijn.Staf Hellemans & Herbert Kitschelt - 1990 - Res Publica 32 (1):81-94.
    A survey conducted in 1985 at the party conferences of the Belgian ecology parties Agalev and Ecolo, allows to brush an empirically based picture of the militants and the internal functioning of these parties. The "new middle class" background of the militants, the stratarchic order in the cadre party, the manifest links with the socalled "new social movements" and the specific brand of a new left-libertarian ideology all point to the new and different character of these parties, in (...)
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  46.  29
    The Society of Singularities: Reply to Four Critics.Andreas Reckwitz - 2023 - Analyse & Kritik 45 (1):177-187.
    In this article, Andreas Reckwitz replies to the four critical commentaries of Patrick Baert, Andreas Pettenkofer, Austin Harrington and Sally Haslanger on his book The Society of Singularities. In this context, he discusses the general position of this book within the landscape of contemporary social theory and the question of what a ‘social logic of the unique’ means. He enters the question in how far his analysis of the new middle class differs from Pierre Bourdieu’s analysis of the (...)
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  47.  67
    Global Market Cultures and the Construction of Modernity in Southeast Asia.Hans-Dieter Evers & Solvay Gerke - 1997 - Thesis Eleven 50 (1):1-14.
    Belief in the benevolence of free markets has become a fundamental credo of professional experts, economists, business people and politicians. We regard this discourse as part of a new culture of markets, which has also taken root in Southeast Asia. Expanding markets and using high-tech devices of communication are interpreted as cultural systems that are used in the construction of modernity. An `unbridled romanticism of productivity' (Baudrillard) and a `romance of capitalism' are the meta-narratives underlying the culture of markets. This (...)
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  48. Mark Sagoff.class='Hi'>Middle Class - forthcoming - Business, Ethics, and the Environment: The Public Policy Debate.
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  49.  12
    Business ethics and corporate social responsibility: a comparative study of selected mega marts in Jaipur city.Sanju Sharma - 2016 - Jaipur: Rawat Publications.
    In the current era of post-liberalization, privatization, and globalization (LPG), questions relating to business ethics and corporate social responsibility (CSR) have surfaced, affecting Indian economy, society, and polity. The main aim of this study is to understand the emergence of the new market in India. Not only has the structure and functioning of the market changed since the advent of globalization, but new norms, regulations, and actors have come into play. In a way, a completely new situation has occurred, characterized (...)
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  50.  28
    Ritual Elements in the New Comedy.Gilbert Murray - 1943 - Classical Quarterly 37 (1-2):46-.
    The New Comedy as an art form is descended both from the Old Comedy and from fifth-century Tragedy. It is a middle style of the sort that Diderot called le genre sérieux. On the one side it made an expurgation of the Old Comedy by dropping the gross elements of the primitive ritual έσεωςκμος which still survived in Aristophanes, the phallic dress, the ευρομός in language, and the reckless personal satire, while it kept and emphasized the final Gamos, or (...)
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