Journal ArticleDOI
One dimensional man
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This article is published in Philosophical Books.The article was published on 1965-05-01. It has received 2842 citations till now.read more
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Boundary-Work and the Demarcation of Science from Non-Science: Strains and Interests in Professional Ideologies of Scientists
TL;DR: The demarcation of science from other intellectual activities is an analytic problem for philosophers and sociologists and is examined as a practical problem for scientists in this article, where a set of characteristics available for ideological attribution to science reflect ambivalences or strains within the institution: science can be made to look empirical or theoretical, pure or applied.
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Corporate social and environmental reporting
Rob Gray,Reza Kouhy,Simon Lavers +2 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the corporate social reporting literature, its major theoretical preoccupations and empirical conclusions, attempts to re-examine the theoretical tensions that exist between “classical” political economy interpretations of social disclosure and those from more “bourgeois” perspectives.
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Staged Authenticity: arrangements of social space in tourist settings
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined accounts of travelers in terms of Erving Goffman's front versus back distinction and found that tourists try to enter back regions of the places they visit because these regions are associated with intimacy of relations and authenticity of experiences.
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Why Do Brands Cause Trouble? A Dialectical Theory of Consumer Culture and Branding
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors trace the rise of the modern cultural engineering paradigm of branding, premised upon a consumer culture that granted marketers cultural authority, and describe the current post-postmodern consumer culture, which is premised on the pursuit of personal sovereignty through brands.
Book
Sour Grapes: Studies in the Subversion of Rationality
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a list of states that are essentially by-products of rationality, bias, and ideology, including sour grapes, as well as byproducts of belief, bias and ideology.
References
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Capitalism, Valorization and the Political Economy of Ecological Crisis:
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight valorization through commodification as a process specific to and defining of the capitalist mode of production as the key dynamic to ecological crisis, and discuss the role of capital in this process.
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Chastity for democracy: Surplus repression and the rhetoric of sex education
TL;DR: The authors argue that the New Right seized the liberationist argument for open public discourse about sexuality to sublimate libidinal desires into a national project of familial (re)productivity.
Women Leaders in Higher Education: Constructing an Active Voice -
TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative study investigates how seven successful women leaders in higher education have constructed and implemented an active voice in developing their own leadership skills, and towards advancing opportunities for future women leaders, despite barriers that may traditionally impede leadership attainment for women.
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I can't talk to you if you say that: An ideological collision at the International Design Conference at Aspen, 1970
TL;DR: The 1970 edition of the International Design Conference at Aspen was the occasion for an ideological collision between a youthful, environmentally focused subset of attendees, and members of the design elite who organized the conference as mentioned in this paper.
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The One-Dimensionality of Econometric Data: The Frankfurt School and the Critique of Quantification
TL;DR: The authors argue that the emergence of econometrics as a mode of mediated knowledge is a reified practice within the broader technical administration of social life, a practice that is not a transparent representation of social phenomena.