The End of Modernity What the Finacial and Environmental Crisis is Really Telling Us at Meripustak

The End of Modernity What the Finacial and Environmental Crisis is Really Telling Us

Books from same Author: Professor Stuart Sim

Books from same Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Related Category: Author List / Publisher List


  • Retail Price: ₹ 2334/- [ 0.00% off ]

    Seller Price: ₹ 2334

Sold By: T K Pandey      Click for Bulk Order

Offer 1: Get ₹ 111 extra discount on minimum ₹ 500 [Use Code: Bharat]

Offer 2: Get 0.00 % + Flat ₹ 100 discount on shopping of ₹ 1500 [Use Code: IND100]

Offer 3: Get 0.00 % + Flat ₹ 300 discount on shopping of ₹ 5000 [Use Code: MPSTK300]

Free Shipping (for orders above ₹ 499) *T&C apply.

In Stock

Free Shipping Available



Click for International Orders
  • Provide Fastest Delivery

  • 100% Original Guaranteed
  • General Information  
    Author(s)Professor Stuart Sim
    PublisherEdinburgh University Press
    ISBN9780748640355
    Pages232
    BindingHardcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearJune 2010

    Description

    Edinburgh University Press The End of Modernity What the Finacial and Environmental Crisis is Really Telling Us by Professor Stuart Sim

    Global financial crisis, global environmental crisis -- what connects them? Stuart Sim claims they are both symptoms of the end of modernity, the cultural system that has prevailed in the West from the Enlightenment onwards. In this provocative book, Sim argues that the modern world's insatiable need for technologically driven economic progress is unsustainable, and potentially destructive of the planet and its socio-economic systems. The new landscape this creates - socially, politically, economically, intellectually - is explored through an interdisciplinary approach, providing a wide-ranging assessment of the collapse of modernity and the challenges it poses us. Sim calls for a radical alteration in our world view and for purposeful changes both to our economic and intellectual life: we need to jettison the free market, rein in conspicuous consumption, reinvigorate public service, and develop talents other than the entrepreneurial if we are to reconstruct our society satisfactorily.Key Features * Brings out the broader cultural dimensions of the global financial crisis * Reveals the contradictions at the heart of modernity and its cult of progress * Offers a thought-provoking interdisciplinary analysis of late modernity and its aftermath * Provides a detailed reassessment of the value of postmodern thought in the new cultural situation * Outlines the ideological adjustments we shall have to make in a post-progress worldshow more