Shelley Gaskin; Linda Foster-Turpen; John Preston; Sally Preston; Robert Ferrett; Alicia Vargas; Jeffrey Howard (2004) Saatavuus: Loppuunmyyty Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Timothy L Barklow; Sally Dawson; Howard E Haber; James L Siegrist World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd (1997) Saatavuus: Painos loppu Kovakantinen kirja
M I Marks; Howard Robert Jan Howard Kelly Marsha Marsha Sally Marks; Melvin I Marks Springer-Verlag New York Inc. (1984) Saatavuus: Hankintapalvelu Kovakantinen kirja
Lexington Books Sivumäärä: 110 sivua Asu: Kovakantinen kirja Julkaisuvuosi: 2012, 18.01.2012 (lisätietoa) Kieli: Englanti
In the writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Sally Howard Campbell finds the bridge between the now-dominant psycho-social conception of alienation and the legal-political conception that prevailed prior to Rousseau. She discusses Rousseau’s transformation of the concept of alienation and how it laid much of the groundwork for Marx’s later, more explicit discussions of man’s alienation. Using Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality, Campbell shows how Rousseau depicts the development of man’s awareness of himself as a conscious and moral being, illustrating man’s journey from a natural state of self-sufficiency to one of dependence and alienation. Paradoxically, she describes Rousseau’s belief that a state of wholeness can only be achieved through a man’s total alienation of himself to the community, free from the alienating effects of civil society. She concludes that, like Marx, Rousseau believed that alienation can only be transcended through the merging of the individual and the community.