User Menu

Torrent Index Upload

 


User Name

Password

Remember

Register
Lost your password?

CategoriesDocumentaryNews & Current AffairseBooks, Magazines, Audio Books
ChomskyTalks, Debates, InterviewsMisc
Last 5 Donors

t h.

$ 1

Anonymous

€ 50

Anonymous

€ 7

Anonymous

€ 10

David P.

$ 5

Donate!
SyndicationRSS
FriendsTorrent Finder :: Search Top Torrent sites all from one page
Torrent Info

Why We Love Sociopaths: A Guide to Late Capitalist Television - Adam Kotsko

Seeds4 Seeds Leechers0 Leechers
261.03 KB
Report Abuse/Infringement

Why We Love Sociopaths: A Guide To Late Capitalist Television (EPUB)
by Adam Kotsko

Zero Books

Argues that our fascination with cold and ruthless television characters reflects a broken social contract.

Sociopaths are pervasive in contemporary television, from high-brow drama all the way down to cartoons -- and of course the news as well. From the scheming Eric Cartman of South Park to the seductive imposter Don Draper of Mad Men, cold and ruthless characters captivate us, making us wish that we could be so effective and successful. Yet why should we admire characters who get ahead by being amoral and uncaring? In his follow-up to Awkwardness, Adam Kotsko argues that the popularity of the ruthless sociopath reflects our dissatisfaction with a failed social contract, showing that we believe that the world rewards the evil and uncaring rather than the good. By analyzing characters like the serial killer star of Dexter and the cynical Dr. House, Kotsko shows that the fantasy of the sociopath distracts us from our real problems -- but that we still might benefit from being a little more sociopathic.



Info Hash

dfd74636fa99128f5dbf1b15d8de7f2a6aa4c962


Tracker

http://onebigtorrent.org


Category

eBooks, Magazines, Audio Books

Uploaded by

UnknownUnknown

Uploaded on

May 17, 2012, 09:02:48

Number of files

1

Last Seeder

19m 33s ago


Seen

2078


1 Comment


Sounds like the "everything bad is good for you" spin that wonks put on technology. One cannot say sociopathy distracts up from our real problems, say like ubiquitous preoccupation with frivolous communication with handheld devices and at the same time say 'people might benefit from it.' Might schmight, it's just wiggle words for accepting what is in Christian Lander's phrase the "stuff white people like."
Jun 03 2012, 15:44 CEST
Your Comment


E-mail me about reactions to my comment.

(Please LOG IN first.)

Get E-mail notification about new comments. (LOG IN first)