We are now living in a 'risk' society: risk analysis, risk assessment and risk management are ever-expanding industries. In this fully revised and expanded update of her highly cited, influential and well-known book, Deborah Lupton provides a comprehensive review of the major sociocultural theoretical perspectives and empirical research on risk.
This book is really good. It`s a well written book. And why is it so? What makes this book so different, from thousand others? Why does this book surpass those ridiculous academic writings, who appears to be written by idiots?
Because of it`s simpleness. The lack of pretenciousbullshit
Now, this man - is Ulrich Beck. The writer of the infamous Risk Society. Off course, people cling to idea that this man is a good writer. Which is false.
A mediocer writer, maybe. But that is irrelevant, when he fills the pages with mindless nonsense
Writing is about conveying information - communication
not about showing off how many big words you can put into your text.
So, how is it that Deborah Lupton, can take Beck`s ideas (which he off course stole from somebody else...) and convey them better than mr. Beck himself?
Because she manages to leave out the pretencious bullshit that doesn`t belong there. She tells the truth, the way she sees it.
So yeah, great book. Great introduction to the field. Loved the part about Foucault - a terrific read. Never saw the connection between risk and governmentality untill I read this book.
If all academic writers wrote this way, my life as a student would be a whole lot easier. And the world would be a richer place
Imagine the day when an uneducated person, can pick up an academic text , and read it. Without a dictionary. It shouldn't be necessary to have a doctorates degree, just to read a simple article or book. This is a great example, that such a thing can be done.["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
A really accessible and concise review of the ways risk is constructed in the modern (Western) world. Covers various perspectives, offers useful comparisons, and provides clear examples for some rather abstract and complex theory. It really helped me put different scholars and views into conversation with one another.