The Information of History Triptych
In: History of the present: a journal of critical history, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 176-182
ISSN: 2159-9793
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In: History of the present: a journal of critical history, Band 10, Heft 1, S. 176-182
ISSN: 2159-9793
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 38, Heft 2, S. 457-460
ISSN: 1548-226X
In: History of the present: a journal of critical history, Band 7, Heft 2, S. 139-174
ISSN: 2159-9793
In: Religion and postmodernism
The metaphysics of secularism -- Evangelical secularism and the measure of Leviathan -- Toward a genealogy of spirituality -- A short biography of Lewis Henry Morgan with curious -- Asides on the effects of spirituality and the emergence of anthropological comprehension -- The touch of secularism -- What do I love when I love my machine?
In: History of the present: a journal of critical history, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 155-182
ISSN: 2159-9793
AbstractIn the early 1970s, as the industrial economy crumbled around Detroit and its suburbs, Dr. H. C. Tien, an independent electroconvulsive therapist who ran the Michigan Institute of Psychosynthesis in Lansing, MI, advocated a "cybernetic" approach to family psychiatry. In Tien's practice, one can learn how the liberatory kernel of religion and the truth of sexual difference—key components of moral treatment in nineteenth-century asylum reform—became amplified by emerging paradigms of neural nets and information processing. In Tien's practice—what he called Electric Love Therapy—electric shock treatment became a technology of conversion and, more precisely, of sexual differentiation and spiritual cultivation. Tien's is a disturbing example of how the regulation of sexuality and gender as private matters serves as resource and spur to secular demands to proprietize religion as an interior matter.
In: Social text, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 87-107
ISSN: 1527-1951
In: Comparative studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Band 38, Heft 2, S. 441-443
ISSN: 1548-226X
In recent years, social scientists have turned their critical lens on the historical roots and contours of their disciplines, including their politics and practices, epistemologies and methods, institutionalization and professionalization, national development and colonial expansion, globalization and local contestations, and their public presence and role in society. The Social Sciences in the Looking Glass offers current social scientific perspectives on this reflexive moment in the social sciences. Examining sociology, anthropology, philosophy, political science, legal theory, and religious studies, the volume's contributors outline the present transformations of the social sciences, explore their connections with critical humanities, analyze the challenges of alternate paradigms, and interrogate recent endeavors to move beyond the human. Throughout, the authors, who belong to half a dozen disciplines, trace how the social sciences are thoroughly entangled in the social facts they analyze, and are key to helping us understand the conditions of our world.Contributors. Chitralekha, Jean-Louis Fabiani, Didier Fassin, Johan Heilbron, Miriam Kingsberg Kadia, Kristoffer Kropp, Nicolas Langlitz, John Lardas Modern, Álvaro Morcillo Laiz, Amín Pérez, Carel Smith, George Steinmetz, Peter D. Thomas, Bregje van Eekelen, Agata Zysiak