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Shadow Work eBook

by Ivan Illich
language: english
Publisher: Marion Boyars, January of 1981 ‧
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In five essays, followed by extensive notes and bibliographies, Ivan Illich embarks on a major historical and sociological analysis of modern man's economic existence. He traces and analyzes options which surpass the conventional political 'right-left' and the technological 'soft-hard' alternatives and presents the concept of the 'vernacular' domain: "...to name those acts of competence, lust or concern that we want to defend from measurement by Chicago Boys or Socialist Commissars...the preparation of food and the shaping of language, childbirth and recreation, without implying either a privatized activity akin to the housework of modern women, a hobby or an irrational and primitive procedure." Illich deals provocatively with the controlling uses of language and science and the valuation of women and work. Drawing on unfamiliar historical sources, he lays bare the roots of much of the social ordering which affects industrial man: his own creation, but one which, at the same time, connives at his own oppression.

Shadow Work

by Ivan Illich

Property Description
ISBN: 9780714521404
Publisher: Marion Boyars
Release Date: January of 1981
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in English > Fiction > Fiction
EAN: 9780714521404
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ivan Illich

Ivan Illich was born in Vienna in 1926.
Illich's path to freedom becomes intertwined, from a certain point onward, with Latin America, and Mexico in particular, where he founded the renowned CIDOC (Intercultural Documentation Center) research center.
His work breaks with all models of academic thought.
While not rejecting formal positions in academia in principle, Illich always sought to integrate into the community of meaning and senses that he considered to be his natural place.
Regarding our times, he wrote that "economic growth projects quickly crumble into ruin, and we must learn to live amidst their debris."

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BY THE AUTHOR