Do you like reading history? Well.. history teach you what makes nowadays condition. What makes your environment today, your village, your city, your town, your country, even the world your living today. The history also teach you how people in the past make mistake so that, expectedly, you don't repeat the same mistake as they did in the past. Therefore the history is important. In the smaller scope, history tells you how you werw become you are nowadays. There are lots more advantages to learn

Sabtu, 12 November 2016

The Promise of Happiness

The Promise of Happiness
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326
By:"Sara Ahmed"
"Philosophy"
Published on 2010-03-16 by Duke University Press

We could contrast my method with Darrin M. McMahon's \u003cb\u003eHappiness: A History\u003c/b\u003e, a \u003cbr\u003e\nbook that gives us so many threads to unravel. He begins with the question “How \u003cbr\u003e\nto write a history of something so elusive, so intangible—of this 'thing' that is not ...

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The Promise of Happiness is a provocative cultural critique of the imperative to be happy. It asks what follows when we make our desires and even our own happiness conditional on the happiness of others: “I just want you to be happy”; “I’m happy if you’re happy.” Combining philosophy and feminist cultural studies, Sara Ahmed reveals the affective and moral work performed by the “happiness duty,” the expectation that we will be made happy by taking part in that which is deemed good, and that by being happy ourselves, we will make others happy. Ahmed maintains that happiness is a promise that directs us toward certain life choices and away from others. Happiness is promised to those willing to live their lives in the right way. Ahmed draws on the intellectual history of happiness, from classical accounts of ethics as the good life, through seventeenth-century writings on affect and the passions, eighteenth-century debates on virtue and education, and nineteenth-century utilitarianism. She engages with feminist, antiracist, and queer critics who have shown how happiness is used to justify social oppression, and how challenging oppression causes unhappiness. Reading novels and films including Mrs. Dalloway, The Well of Loneliness, Bend It Like Beckham, and Children of Men, Ahmed considers the plight of the figures who challenge and are challenged by the attribution of happiness to particular objects or social ideals: the feminist killjoy, the unhappy queer, the angry black woman, and the melancholic migrant. Through her readings she raises critical questions about the moral order imposed by the injunction to be happy.

This Book was ranked 15 by Google Books for keyword Happiness: A History.

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