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Key Concepts (Polity)

Concepts of the Self: 3rd edition

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More than ten years on from its original publication, Concepts of the Self still mesmerizes with its insight, comprehensiveness and critique of debates over the self in the social sciences and humanities. Anthony Elliott has written a new preface to this third edition to address some of the most recent developments in the field, and offers a powerful challenge to what he describes as ‘the emergence of anti-theories of the self’.

The first two editions have proven exceptionally popular among students and teachers worldwide. Anthony Elliott provides a scintillating introduction to the major accounts of the self from symbolic interactionism and psychoanalysis to post-feminism and postmodernism. This new edition has been extensively revised and updated to take account of more recent theoretical developments, and a new chapter has been added on individualization which focuses on how the self becomes an agent of ‘do-it-yourself’ autobiographical reconstruction in an age of intensive globalization.

Concepts of the Self remains the most lively, lucid and compelling introduction to contemporary controversies over the self and self-identity in the social sciences and humanities. Written by an author of international reputation, it connects debates about the self directly to identity politics, the sociology of personal relationships and intimacy, and the politics of sexuality, and will continue to be an invaluable introductory text for students in of social and political theory, sociology, social psychology, cultural studies, and gender studies.

218 pages, Paperback

First published August 29, 2001

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Anthony Elliott

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Charlie Byers.
77 reviews2 followers
January 29, 2013
I read this for a class on sociological ideas of self. It's a nice bird's-eye view of some of the major debates in the area in the 20th century, and earlier theorists who've informed those debates. The focus is on summarizing different theorists' arguments, and my main criticism would be that there isn't quite enough introduction to the ideas being discussed; the chapter on technologies of the self does a fine job of summarizing Foucault's ideas of selfhood, and some of the major rebuttals to them, but never actually talks about what's meant by the phrase 'technologies of the self'. I kept craving a topic sentence. The book also omitted any exploration of theories on race/ethnicity, which was a litte surprising. I think the book can be valuable to sociology students for the way it puts influential theorists in context, but I wish there had been more depth to it.
Profile Image for vam pire.
74 reviews
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April 29, 2022
a good introduction to *modern* concepts of the self, which is to say, the text focuses entirely on sociology, psychoanalysis and postmodernism... so not exactly a comprehensive ontology of personal identity.

elliot introduces key thinker within these domains and provides some critique of each, which was useful even if i didn't really agree with some of the conclusions he came to.

note: my reading was mostly focused on chapters 3, 4 and 5. I read the introduction on full, glossed over chapter one (i already had a fairly firm understanding of goffman & the sociological perspective), skipped chapter three (on psychoanalysis) entirely, and also skipped chapter 6 (on AI - though i may come back to this later).

despite offering a concise critique of the postmodern tendency to reduce selfhood to an operation of power, elliott's sympathy for the multiplication of individualism renders his conclusions about the state of the self within modernity politically innert in their confusion.
Profile Image for akemi.
540 reviews305 followers
March 2, 2018
Quick outline of some key thinkers in psychology, poststructuralism and the like, but due to its small size, Elliott often ends up summarising a single book, from a single theorist, in three or four pages, which fails to do justice to how broadly and deeply some of these theorists think.
Profile Image for Tiffany.
14 reviews5 followers
October 7, 2016
An interesting read. Great for people who do not know much about the realm of sociology or want to read something thought-provoking.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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