The lies that bind : rethinking identity, creed, country, color, class, culture / Kwame Anthony Appiah.
Publisher: New York, NY : Liveright Publishing Corporation, a division of W.W. Norton & Company, [2018]Edition: First editionDescription: xvi, 256 pages ; 25 cmISBN:- 9781631493836
- 1631493833
- BD236 .A675 2018
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NMC Library | Stacks | BD236 .A675 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001483832 |
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BD175 .P674 2016 Head in the cloud : why knowing things still matters when facts are so easy to look up / | BD175.5 .P65 H84 2009 Political correctness : a history of semantics and culture / | BD190 .H64 2013 Surfaces and essences : analogy as the fuel and fire of thinking / | BD236 .A675 2018 The lies that bind : rethinking identity, creed, country, color, class, culture / | BD236 .B3813 1994 Simulacra and simulation / | BD331 .C4925 2022 Reality+ : virtual worlds and the problems of philosophy / | BD372 .M47 2008 Process-relational philosophy : an introduction to Alfred North Whitehead / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Classification -- Creed -- Country -- Color -- Class -- Culture -- Coda.
Who do you think you are? That's a question bound up in another: What do you think you are? Gender. Religion. Race. Nationality. Class. Culture. Such affiliations give contours to our sense of self, and shape our polarized world. Yet the collective identities they spawn are riddled with contradictions, and cratered with falsehoods. Kwame Anthony Appiah's The Lies That Bind is an incandescent exploration of the nature and history of the identities that define us. It challenges our assumptions about how identities work. We all know there are conflicts between identities, but Appiah shows how identities are created by conflict. Religion, he demonstrates, gains power because it isn't primarily about belief. Our everyday notions of race are the detritus of discarded nineteenth-century science. Our cherished concept of the sovereign nation--of self-rule--is incoherent and unstable. Class systems can become entrenched by efforts to reform them. Even the very idea of Western culture is a shimmering mirage. From Anton Wilhelm Amo, the eighteenth-century African child who miraculously became an eminent European philosopher before retiring back to Africa, to Italo Svevo, the literary marvel who changed citizenship without leaving home, to Appiah's own father, Joseph, an anticolonial firebrand who was ready to give his life for a nation that did not yet exist, Appiah interweaves keen-edged argument with vibrant narratives to expose the myths behind our collective identities. These "mistaken identities," Appiah explains, can fuel some of our worst atrocities--from chattel slavery to genocide. And yet, he argues that social identities aren't something we can simply do away with. They can usher in moral progress and bring significance to our lives by connecting the small scale of our daily existence with larger movements, causes, and concerns. Elaborating a bold and clarifying new theory of identity, The Lies That Bind is a ringing philosophical statement for the anxious, conflict-ridden twenty-first century. This book will transform the way we think about who--and what--"we" are.
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