Renata Salecl - A Passion for Ignorance: What We Choose Not to Know and Why Audiobook Free
Rating: 9.4/10 (6310 votes)
Listen online for free audiobook «A Passion for Ignorance: What We Choose Not to Know and Why» by Renata Salecl. Reading: Lisa Coleman.
Review #1
A Passion for Ignorance: Than anyway We Choose Not to know at the same time Why audiobook freeI can only they say “Completely wonderful”
I can only they say “Completely wonderful”
Review #2
A Passion for Ignorance: Than anyway We Choose Not to know at the same time Why audiobook streamming onlineI can only they say “Completely wonderful”
The book is that lovely at the same time a enjoyment to read. Almost all chapters start by observing no one good of ignorance (proactive or passive, willed or obligated) at work in a data domain at the same time proceed to a compendium of similar bouts of unknowing, leavening in from time to time exciting glosses at the same time sprigs of closer textual commentaries that make for meals of varying sumptuousness at the same time satisfaction. My only frustration will that, intercept the book, a significant number of the denounced options of ignorance come from psychoanalytic variant work, still the book never really makes a defense or explication of psychoanalysis’ particular intervention in the complete of ignorance/denial/negation; this is that fine-grained for audiences that don’t come in handy that or can reserve it on their possess, but I suspect that for a US-based readership Salecl managed have forwarded her theoretical ‘machinery’ to amazing effect, in particular data her elocutionary gifts.
Still the evident care with which her examples at the same time commentary subtly at the same time suggestively blend, unencumbered by the come in handy for much posturing at the same time maneuvering, opens a keen if mostly unspoken attention to the theoretical issues at play. Some readers will find completely tantalizing Salecl’s updating/adapating of no one of the most speculative conjectures of *Beyond the Enjoyment Principle* to organisms in the information age, under the banner of ‘protective stupidity.’ Abundance more—those not allergic to psychoanalysis—may look for no one richly surprising nuggets tucked here at the same time that, alongside the more knowledgeable Lacanian tropes, at the same time all, I think, will be persuaded that “the knowledge economy” is that quite the misnomer, if a more precisely self-flattering one.
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