Adam Curtis on the Dangers of Self-Expression
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How Freud Got Under Our Skin
This isn't exactly a deep holiness theological issue but I found it to be of significant interest. I hope it is an acceptable topic for this list. It was published today in my local paper but you can find it at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4371266,00.html It expresses how the concept of Self has evolved and changed dramatically over the past 100 years or so. It is a secular view but understanding the secular world will help us to better understand how to minister and witness to it. One comment towards the end in particular caught my eye. "In the near future (by 2010), it seems, the Self will enjoy its own unencumbered space. If you run a society based on the satisfaction of desire, then, of course, there should be no surprise when conventions based in part on duty, such as marriage, begin to collapse." We have of course been a selfish lot ever since the Garden but it seems, in light of this article, that a new Hedonism exists today that affects each and everyone of us in a new and different way. Christ asked us to deny Self, take up the cross, and follow Him. Doing so puts us in direct conflict with modern society. Are we up to the task or have we evolved along with the rest of society? Jerry Frank - Calgary, Alberta [email protected] How Freud Got Under Our Skin From advertisers to politicians, everyone wants to appeal to our sense of Self. And, as a new TV series shows, it was Sigmund Freud’s nephew who turned the analysis of our subconscious into a boom industry: PR Tim Adams Observer Sunday March 10, 2002 Sigmund Freud may have invented the Self, full of unspoken dreams and desires, in 1900, but it was his American nephew, Edward Bernays, who packaged it and put it on to the market. -
Kaplan Recitation Leader: Alex Demshock E-Mail: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Office Hours: Thursdays, 2:00-3:00; Liv
Development of Sociological Theory Rutgers University: Sociology 01:920:313: 01-02; Spring 2017 Tuesday and Thursday, 3:20-4:40PM, Lucy Stone Hall, Room B269 Instructor: Amanda Kaplan Recitation Leader: Alex Demshock E-mail: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Office Hours: Thursdays, 2:00-3:00; Liv. Library Office Hours: TBA Course Summary: It is by no means rare to begrudge or dismiss theoretical texts: often times they use wild and seemingly unintelligible language, provide no context, examples, or applications, and/or reek of real, offensive, and indefensible social prejudices. And yet, theory exists, develops, and continues to be taught. So there must be something to be gained from writing it and learning it, right? In this course, we hope to show you that theory has merit and, what is more, to help you realize that for yourself. To accomplish this, each of us must come to lecture and recitation with an open mind, prepared to discuss and think creatively through each text, and willing to take risks, be vulnerable, and respect one another. Toward these goals, we will learn how to read and critically engage with sociological theory. This entails developing good reading practices; i.e. the ability to read with patience, fortitude, and a “say yes to the text” mentality. This entails honing a critical sensibility; i.e. the ability to identify and interpret sociohistorical context, germane “schools” or “conversations,” political stakes, and oversights. And again, this entails rediscovering your imagination. Indeed, most of the texts we will read were written by white men in 19th century Europe. -
1 American Political Thought II Spring 2021 Boston College Political
1 American Political Thought II Spring 2021 Boston College Political Science 234 Professor Ken I. Kersch Email: [email protected] This course surveys American Political Thought from the end of the Civil War to the election of Ronald Reagan, with a few added readings that bring matters to the present day (a separate course – APT I -- takes up the pre-Civil War period). It is sometimes said that the United States, being new and not European, lacks any serious philosophical tradition, with The Federalist Papers (before the period we treat) the only serious contribution to political thought the nation has produced. Others take the U.S. as the exemplar or apotheosis of a single political theory: Lockean liberalism. At the same time, however, American political history, with its providentialist religiosity, robust democracy, de-centered (and often besieged) localism, vibrant (and sometimes fierce) capitalism, struggles unto war over principles of civic and social equality, and (yes) liberal commitment to individual freedom, is among the most interesting and important in the world. As this list suggests, it is also full of tensions, contradictions, arguments, struggles, and battles. Is American political thought unique or “exceptional”? Is it deep or shallow? Is it a coherent whole, or a cacophonous miscellany? Does it develop over time, or remain rooted in timeless principles? Is it a tradition we should be proud of or ashamed? Is it of value, to our politics today, and beyond our shores, or merely of antiquarian interest? We will look at some of the most prominent American thinkers from the late nineteenth century to today in an attempt to answer these questions, and to avail ourselves of the insights, limits, and legacy of this thought in assessing our individual and collective pasts and futures. -
MAAILMA JA KUVA Korjattu 30 10 2017
MAAILMA JA KUVA – valmistautumista institutionaalista esityskäytäntöä vasten Sanni Priha Taiteen maisterin opinnäyte Dokumentaarinen elokuva Elokuva taiteen ja lavastustaiteen laitos Taiteiden ja suunnittelun korkeakoulu Aalto-yliopisto 27.10.2017 Tekijä Sanni Priha Työn nimi Maailma ja kuva – valmistautumista institutionaalista esityskäytäntöä vasten Laitos Elokuvataiteen ja lavastustaiteen laitos Koulutusohjelma Dokumentaarinen elokuvaohjaus Vuosi 2017 Sivumäärä 64 Kieli suomi Tiivistelmä Tämä taiteellinen tutkimus pohti elokuvan institutionaalisuutta, sen kytkeytymistä uutiskerrontaan ja niiden yhdessä tuottamaa narratiivia. Yhdessä opinnäytetyön taiteellisen osan, dokumentaarisen elokuvan Prime Time Rage / Puoli yhdeksän raivo, kanssa tutkimus muodostaa Sanni Prihan maisterin opinnäytteen. Prime Time Rage tarkasteli televisio-uutisten tuottamaa maailmankuvaa ja sen vastaanottamista. Tutkielma analysoi elokuvainstituution rakenteita ja rakentumista. Tausta-ajatuksena oli elokuvaohjaajan pohdinta siitä, millaisia eettisiä ratkaisuja toimiminen osana elokuvateollisuutta edellyttää. Tekijä pohti ristiriitaista suhdettaan elokuvainstituution rakenteisiin ja etsi keinoja asemoida tekijyytensä suhteessa elokuvainstituutioon. Tutkimuksen keskeisiä käsitteitä olivat ’totuuden jälkeinen’, ’konflikti’, ’polarisaatio’ ja ’kuvien kiertokulku’. Tutkimuksen lähtökohtana oli näiden käsitteiden tarkastelu ja metodina työpäiväkirja, taiteellinen työskentely ja esseistinen kirjoittaminen. Tutkimusaineisto muodostui kysymyksenasettelun pohjalta ja koostui -
MICRO PUBLICPLACES MICRO PUBLICPLACES H Ans F Rei an D Marc Bö Hlen S Ituate D T Echnologies P the ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE of NEW YORK
1 1 THE ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE OF NEW YORK SituateD TECHNOLOGIES PAMPHLETS 6 HANS FREI AND MARC BÖHLEN PUBLICPLACES MICRO MICRO PUBLICPLACES H S THE ARCHITECTURAL LEAGUE OF NEW YORK ituate ANS F REI D T AN ECHNOLOGIES D MARC BÖ P HLEN Situated Technologies Pamphlets 6: A M MicroPublicPlaces PHLET Hans Frei and Marc Böhlen Series Editors: Omar Khan, Trebor Scholz, and Mark Shepard S 6 www.situatedtechnologies.net Advisory Committee: Keller Easterling, Anne Galloway, Malcolm McCullough, Howard Rheingold Published by: The Architectural League of New York 594 Broadway, Suite 607, New York, NY 10012, 212 753 1722 www.archleague.org [email protected] Pamphlets Coordinator: Gregory Wessner Digital Programs and Exhibitions Director, The Architectural League of New York Design: Jena Sher (cc) Hans Frei, Marc Böhlen Axonometric illustrations by Nikolaus Hamburger This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Non- commercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/ by-nc-sa/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, usa. isbn 978-0-9800994-5-4 MICRO PUBLICPLACES The Situated Technologies Pamphlet Series extends a discourse initiated In this volume of the Situated Technologies Pamphlets Series, Marc in the summer of 2006 by a three-month-long discussion on the Insti- Böhlen and Hans Frei propose a unique confluence of public architecture tute for Distributed Creativity (idc) mailing list that culminated in ITORS and information systems that they term MicroPublicPlaces. Beginning the Architecture and Situated Technologies symposium at the Urban with a critique of the current state of the public realm, they follow two ED Center and Eyebeam in New York, co-produced by the Center for trajectories: one through Hannah Arendt’s “vita activa” and Bruno Virtual Architecture (cva), the Architectural League of New York and THE Latour’s “dingpolitiks”, and another through the history of information the idc. -
December 15, 2008 Perspectives in Theory
December 15, 2008 Perspectives in Theory: Anthology of Theorists affecting the Educational World Editors: Misty M. Bicking, Brian Collins, Laura Fernett, Barbara Taylor, Kathleen Sutton Shepherd University Table Of Contents Abstract_______________________________________________________________________4 Alfred Adler ___________________________________________________________________5 Melissa Bartlett Mary Ainsworth _______________________________________________________________17 Misty Bicking Alois Alzheimer _______________________________________________________________30 Maura Bird Albert Bandura ________________________________________________________________45 Lauren Boyer James A. Banks________________________________________________________________59 Adel D. Broadwater Vladimir Bekhterev_____________________________________________________________72 Thomas Cochrane Benjamin Bloom_______________________________________________________________86 Brian Collins John Bowlby and Attachment Theory ______________________________________________98 Colin Curry Louis Braille: Research_________________________________________________________111 Justin Everhart Urie Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model___________________________________________124 Kristin Ezzell Jerome Bruner________________________________________________________________138 Laura Beth Fernett Noam Chomsky Stubborn Without________________________________________________149 Jamin Gibson Auguste Comte _______________________________________________________________162 Heather Manning -
Infrastructural Aesthetics in the Films of Adam Curtis
Cultural Politics vol.14, no.3, November 2018. Accepted: 3rd May 2018. “Destabilized Perception” Infrastructural Aesthetics in the Films of Adam Curtis Rob Coley Abstract: The formerly dissident status of the essay film has, in recent years, been exchanged for a great deal of favorable attention both inside and outside of academia. In the more overly moralistic commentary on the form, the contemporary essay film is submitted as a tactical response to a surfeit of audiovisual media, to an era in which most of us have become both consumers and producers of a digital deluge. The work of Adam Curtis is notably absent from these ongoing debates. Yet Curtis is far from an underground figure— he has been making essayistic films for the BBC for more than twenty years and was the first to produce work directly for the iPlayer platform. Using archival images to examine the present, his films produce counterintuitive connections and abrupt collisions that supplant the authority of narrative causality for a precarious network of associations and linkages. This article treats Curtis’s recent body of work diagnostically. It argues that, quite apart from any promise of escape or deliverance, the aesthetic form of his work actively inhabits the rhythms and vectors of contemporary media. For Curtis, the media- technological conditions of the twenty-first century provoke a crisis that is both political and epistemological, one in which sensemaking can no longer claim to take place at a distance from the infrastructure that mediates such processes but is instead thoroughly and inescapably immanent to them, a situation that prevents contact with the outside. -
Century of the Self Transcript
Century of the Self Transcript Written and Produced by Adam Curtis A hundred years ago a new theory about human nature was put forth by Sigmund Freud. He had discovered he said, primitive and sexual and aggressive forces hidden deep inside the minds of all human beings. Forces which if not controlled led individuals and societies to chaos and destruction. This series is about how those in power have used Freud's theories to try and control the dangerous crowd in an age of mass democracy. But the heart of the series is not just Sigmund Freud but other members of the Freud family. This episode is about Freud's American nephew Edward Bernays. Bernays is almost completely unknown today but his influence on the 20th century was nearly as great as his uncles. Because Bernays was the first person to take Freud's ideas about human beings and use them to manipulate the masses. He showed American corporations for the first time how to they could make people want things they didn't need by linking mass produced goods to their unconscious desires. Out of this would come a new political idea of how to control the masses. By satisfying people's inner selfish desires one made them happy and thus docile. It was the start of the all-consuming self which has come to dominate our world today. Part One: Happiness Machines Freud's ideas about how the human mind works have now become an accepted part of society. As have psychoanalysts. Every year the psychotherapists ball is held in a grand place in Vienna. -
Borderlands E-Journal
borderlands e-journal www.borderlands.net.au VOLUME 16 NUMBER 1, 2017 Adam Curtis’s compelling logic: the tortuous corridor to the hypernormal Brett Nicholls University of Otago It’s like living in the mind of a depressed hippy (Curtis 2007b) Adam Curtis is a BAFTA award-winning documentary filmmaker who employs borrowed images from the past to construct complex accounts of the political present. Produced primarily for the medium of television (the BBC), though this has expanded in recent years to include digital platforms, his films consist of an idiosyncratic use of archived image and sound fragments: Hollywood and British films, news footage, expert vox pops, television shows, corporate training films, drone footage, film music, sound effects, and so on. These fragments are generally overlayed by a serious ‘matter of fact’, Journalistic voice-over narration (Curtis himself), that tells the story of our times. Curtis is well- known as a polemicist. His films directly question and challenge the proficiency of political elites. For instance, a powerful sequence in Curtis’s most debated and cited film, The power of nightmares (2004), consists of news footage of George W Bush on a podium looking direct to camera. Bush triumphantly announces, ‘one by one terrorists are learning the meaning of American justice’. This image is inserted at the end of a longer sequence that provides an account of absurdist court cases against ‘terror suspects’ in the USA. After the attacks upon the WTC towers, law enforcement, in its various forms, is busy gathering evidence against ‘terror suspects’ inside America’s borders. The film reveals that the gathered evidence is specious and thin. -
Christian Songs Artist Genre a Love Like This Phil & Brenda Nicholas Christian & Gospel Bestill Yolanda Adams Christian
Christian Songs Artist Genre A Love Like This Phil & Brenda Nicholas Christian & Gospel Bestill Yolanda Adams Christian & Gospel Find Your Wings Mark Harris Christian & Gospel I'm In Love With You (feat. Kari Jobe) Klaus Christian & Gospel Set Me as a Seal Matt Maher Christian & Gospel Walk By Faith Jeremy Camp Christian & Gospel What Faith Can Do Kutless Christian & Gospel When God Made You NewSong Christian & Gospel Christmas Songs A Not So Merry Christmas Bobby Vee Christmas A Snowflake Fell (And It Felt Like a Kiss) Glasvegas Christmas All I Want For Christmas Is You Mariah Carey Christmas ALONE ON CHRISTMAS Ronettes Christmas Another Christmas Song Stephen Colbert Christmas Auld Lange Syne The Lonesome Travelers Christmas Ave Maria Stevie Wonder Christmas Away In A Manger Gladys Knight & The Pips Christmas Baby, It's Cold Outside Lady Antebellum Christmas Baby's First Christmas Connie Francis Christmas Back Door Santa (rock) Christmas BELLS ARE RINGING Christmas Blue Christmas Elvis Presley Christmas Carol of the Bells / Jingle Bells Barry Manilow Christmas Carol Of The Bells- Jamaican Christmas Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) Christmas Christmas Everyday Smokey Robinson & The Miracles Christmas CHRISTMAS IS NEAR Nat "King" Cole Christmas Cold December Night Michael Bublé Christmas Comfort and Joy ( flute- jazz) Paul Gilbert Christmas Cool Yule Williams-Sonoma Christmas Dance Of The Sugarplum Fairies (Nutcracker) techno Christmas Deck The Halls/Bring A Torch, Jeanette, Isabella Smokey Robinson & The Miracles Christmas Dominick the -
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Anneleen Masschelein and Dominiek Hoens SIGN OF THE TIMES An Introduction1 1. Sign of the times? he title of this collection of essays, “Sign of the Times”, has a distinctly 1980s feel to it. Not only because of the eponymous Prince song that cap- tured the bleak situation at the end of 1980s, but also because the refer- ence to signs and semiotics seems about as cutting-edge today as psycho- Tanalysis, or psychoanalytic criticism, would appear to be… In those now far-away 1980s, both semiotics and psychoanalysis were still considered pilot sciences for the humanities in France and everywhere else French Theory reigned. Freud and Lacan were considered essential reading for scholars throughout the humanities: as Google’s Ngram viewer neatly demonstrates, the absolute peak of Freud citations in English books can be found between 1980 and 2000.2 However, already in his inaugural Leçon at Collège de France in 1977, Roland Barthes warned his readers that it would be unwise to hedge one’s bets on psychoanalysis in the stock market of theories. This advice seems even more sound thirty years later. Even in France — with Argentina one of the last bulwarks of psychoanalysis — 1. This issue is inspired by a reflection that started at the conference “Sign of the Times, Psychoanalytic Literary Cultural Criticism in Changing Paradigms” held in Leuven in 2008, organized by Dirk de Geest, Tomas Geyskens, Anneleen Masschelein, Paul Moyaert and Philippe Van Haute. We want to thank all the participants to this conference for their stimulating contributions as well as FWO Vlaanderen and the Research Unit Literature and Culture of the KULeuven for their generous support. -
Beyond Death's Dream Kingdom: Modernity and the Psychoanalytic Social Imaginary
DOI: 10.7413/22818138043 Beyond Death’s Dream Kingdom: Modernity and the Psychoanalytic Social Imaginary Neil Turnbull*1 Abstract The appearance on the historical stage of Western modernity is often understood as an “epochal event” that overturned an earlier pre-modern cultural condition that was premised on the dialectic of life and death and the attempt to forge a suitable balance or harmony between them. As such Western modernity is often viewed as the emergence as a new liberal political order based upon individualism, radical immanence and the emergence of a new calculating subjectivities and governmentalities in ways that led to the rejection of the transcendent, the metaphysical and the theological dimensions of human life. In this paper, using Hans Holbein’s famous painting The Ambassadors as a point of reference and adopting the oblique position in relation to the modern taken up by the artist in this painting, I suggest that in the 20th Century, largely as a result of an awareness of the metaphysical significance of the catastrophe of the First World War, that modern liberalism was thrown into crisis and the old pre-modern metaphysi- cal problematic returned as new focus of social and political concern. With specific reference to the work of Sigmund Freud and later psychoanalytic thinkers who took Freud’s idea of the death drive as their theoretical point of departure, I show how in the 89 20th century psychoanalytically-informed practitioners attempted to resolve the ancient conflict between the forces of life and death through the creation of an enchanted phantasmagoria of mass consumable objects that were often specifically designed and Anno IV - n.