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Dimensions of Prejudice

Towards a Political Economy of Bigotry

by Zak Cope (Author)
©2008 Monographs 402 Pages

Summary

This book argues that unreasonable dogmatic beliefs are expressions of socially structured patterns of prejudice. Specifically, prejudice is explained as being produced and dispersed within the confines of the political structures governing the manner in which material human needs are created and met. Classifying various dimensions of prejudice (philosophical, epistemological, psychological, sociological, political, and cultural), the book conceptualises the relation between dogmatic thinking and these facets of human existence. Criticising and comparing a wide range of theories and factual data relating to the growth and expression of prejudice, the book is a theoretical discussion of problems surrounding the production of cultural norms, the psychological effects of filial systems and relations between the sexes, the constitution of modern capitalist society, and elementary principles of political democracy. Drawing on feminism, whiteness studies, Marxist theories of racism and imperialism, psychoanalysis, critical theory, and cultural studies, the author examines the constraints placed upon individuals’, groups’, and nations’ propensity for scientific and rational thinking.

Details

Pages
402
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039114238
Language
English
Keywords
Vorurteil Prejudice Ideology Personality and Bigotry Patriarchy and Democracy
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2008. 402 pp.

Biographical notes

Zak Cope (Author)

The Author: Zak Cope obtained a Ph.D. from the School of Politics, International Studies and Philosophy at Queen’s University Belfast. He has a degree in Scholastic Philosophy and a Master’s degree in Political Theory and Social Criticism from the same university. His most recent research has aimed to articulate conservative ideologies in relation to local and inter/national economic development.

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Title: Dimensions of Prejudice