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This book offers a unique discursive perspective on the rapid rise of food charity and how food poverty has emerged as a symptom of deeper problems requiring psychological intervention.
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This book offers a unique discursive perspective on the rapid rise of food charity and how food poverty has emerged as a symptom of deeper problems requiring psychological intervention.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 141
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 186g
- ISBN-13: 9780367523633
- ISBN-10: 0367523639
- Artikelnr.: 62572664
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 141
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Dezember 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 8mm
- Gewicht: 186g
- ISBN-13: 9780367523633
- ISBN-10: 0367523639
- Artikelnr.: 62572664
Christian Möller is a Research Fellow in the School of Social Work and Social Policy at the University of Strathclyde, UK. He also teaches Critical Social Psychology as an Associate Lecturer at The Open University, UK. His main research interests are in critical discourse analysis, social and health inequalities and charity work.
1. Introduction: An Essay in Refusal
2. 'More than Food' and Behaviour Change
3. New Subjects of Charity
4. Toward a Critical Ontology of Food Charity and the Psychologisation
of Poverty
5. Scope and Focus of the Book
1. The Dispositive of Food Charity
2.1. "What is a Dispositive?"
2.2. Fuelling the Machine: Flows and Materialisations of Knowledge
2.3. The Spectacle of Food Charity: Neighbourhood Food Collections (NFCs)
2.4. Collection Points: Consuming Charity
2.5. Feeding the Worthy Poor
2.6. Poverty Relief as Spectacle
2.7. Failures in Disposition and Possible Resistance
2.8. Conclusion
2. Problematisations of Food Poverty
1. Problematisations in Foucault
2. Constituting Problematic Subjects in the Food Bank
3. Problematisation 1: Food Poverty as Sudden Crisis Driven by
Structural Factors
4. Problematisation 2: Food Poverty as Personal Chaos and Culture of
Poverty
5. Problematisation 3: Food Poverty as Result of a Failing Society
6. Local Constructions of Food Poverty as a Social Problem
7. Conclusion
3. Crisis and the Medicalisation of Poverty
1. Crisis as Discourse: A Brief Genealogy
2. The Constitution of 'Clients in Crisis'
3. A Nudge in the Food Bank
4. Behavioural Activation and (not so) Soft Paternalism
5. Conclusion
4. 'More Than Food'
1. 'More Than Food'
2. "Eat Well - Spend Less"
3. Job Clubs and Social Spaces in Food Banks
4. Conclusion
5. The Psychopolitics of Food Charity
1. From Vulnerability to Wellbeing: Happy Subjects of Charity?
2. Disrupting the Spectacle and Killing Charity's Joy
3. Developing a Shockproof Subject?
4. Refusing Resilience, Positivity and Development
5. Conclusion
6. Concluding Reflections: From Refusal to Innovation
1. Psychology, 'Nudge' Economics and Neoliberalism
2. Liberalism and the Traps of Humanism
3. Absent Voices and Poverty Research
4. Essays in Refusal: The Value of Critique
5. Critique is Not Enough: From "What's to be done?" to "What more am I
to do?"
References
2. 'More than Food' and Behaviour Change
3. New Subjects of Charity
4. Toward a Critical Ontology of Food Charity and the Psychologisation
of Poverty
5. Scope and Focus of the Book
1. The Dispositive of Food Charity
2.1. "What is a Dispositive?"
2.2. Fuelling the Machine: Flows and Materialisations of Knowledge
2.3. The Spectacle of Food Charity: Neighbourhood Food Collections (NFCs)
2.4. Collection Points: Consuming Charity
2.5. Feeding the Worthy Poor
2.6. Poverty Relief as Spectacle
2.7. Failures in Disposition and Possible Resistance
2.8. Conclusion
2. Problematisations of Food Poverty
1. Problematisations in Foucault
2. Constituting Problematic Subjects in the Food Bank
3. Problematisation 1: Food Poverty as Sudden Crisis Driven by
Structural Factors
4. Problematisation 2: Food Poverty as Personal Chaos and Culture of
Poverty
5. Problematisation 3: Food Poverty as Result of a Failing Society
6. Local Constructions of Food Poverty as a Social Problem
7. Conclusion
3. Crisis and the Medicalisation of Poverty
1. Crisis as Discourse: A Brief Genealogy
2. The Constitution of 'Clients in Crisis'
3. A Nudge in the Food Bank
4. Behavioural Activation and (not so) Soft Paternalism
5. Conclusion
4. 'More Than Food'
1. 'More Than Food'
2. "Eat Well - Spend Less"
3. Job Clubs and Social Spaces in Food Banks
4. Conclusion
5. The Psychopolitics of Food Charity
1. From Vulnerability to Wellbeing: Happy Subjects of Charity?
2. Disrupting the Spectacle and Killing Charity's Joy
3. Developing a Shockproof Subject?
4. Refusing Resilience, Positivity and Development
5. Conclusion
6. Concluding Reflections: From Refusal to Innovation
1. Psychology, 'Nudge' Economics and Neoliberalism
2. Liberalism and the Traps of Humanism
3. Absent Voices and Poverty Research
4. Essays in Refusal: The Value of Critique
5. Critique is Not Enough: From "What's to be done?" to "What more am I
to do?"
References
1. Introduction: An Essay in Refusal
2. 'More than Food' and Behaviour Change
3. New Subjects of Charity
4. Toward a Critical Ontology of Food Charity and the Psychologisation
of Poverty
5. Scope and Focus of the Book
1. The Dispositive of Food Charity
2.1. "What is a Dispositive?"
2.2. Fuelling the Machine: Flows and Materialisations of Knowledge
2.3. The Spectacle of Food Charity: Neighbourhood Food Collections (NFCs)
2.4. Collection Points: Consuming Charity
2.5. Feeding the Worthy Poor
2.6. Poverty Relief as Spectacle
2.7. Failures in Disposition and Possible Resistance
2.8. Conclusion
2. Problematisations of Food Poverty
1. Problematisations in Foucault
2. Constituting Problematic Subjects in the Food Bank
3. Problematisation 1: Food Poverty as Sudden Crisis Driven by
Structural Factors
4. Problematisation 2: Food Poverty as Personal Chaos and Culture of
Poverty
5. Problematisation 3: Food Poverty as Result of a Failing Society
6. Local Constructions of Food Poverty as a Social Problem
7. Conclusion
3. Crisis and the Medicalisation of Poverty
1. Crisis as Discourse: A Brief Genealogy
2. The Constitution of 'Clients in Crisis'
3. A Nudge in the Food Bank
4. Behavioural Activation and (not so) Soft Paternalism
5. Conclusion
4. 'More Than Food'
1. 'More Than Food'
2. "Eat Well - Spend Less"
3. Job Clubs and Social Spaces in Food Banks
4. Conclusion
5. The Psychopolitics of Food Charity
1. From Vulnerability to Wellbeing: Happy Subjects of Charity?
2. Disrupting the Spectacle and Killing Charity's Joy
3. Developing a Shockproof Subject?
4. Refusing Resilience, Positivity and Development
5. Conclusion
6. Concluding Reflections: From Refusal to Innovation
1. Psychology, 'Nudge' Economics and Neoliberalism
2. Liberalism and the Traps of Humanism
3. Absent Voices and Poverty Research
4. Essays in Refusal: The Value of Critique
5. Critique is Not Enough: From "What's to be done?" to "What more am I
to do?"
References
2. 'More than Food' and Behaviour Change
3. New Subjects of Charity
4. Toward a Critical Ontology of Food Charity and the Psychologisation
of Poverty
5. Scope and Focus of the Book
1. The Dispositive of Food Charity
2.1. "What is a Dispositive?"
2.2. Fuelling the Machine: Flows and Materialisations of Knowledge
2.3. The Spectacle of Food Charity: Neighbourhood Food Collections (NFCs)
2.4. Collection Points: Consuming Charity
2.5. Feeding the Worthy Poor
2.6. Poverty Relief as Spectacle
2.7. Failures in Disposition and Possible Resistance
2.8. Conclusion
2. Problematisations of Food Poverty
1. Problematisations in Foucault
2. Constituting Problematic Subjects in the Food Bank
3. Problematisation 1: Food Poverty as Sudden Crisis Driven by
Structural Factors
4. Problematisation 2: Food Poverty as Personal Chaos and Culture of
Poverty
5. Problematisation 3: Food Poverty as Result of a Failing Society
6. Local Constructions of Food Poverty as a Social Problem
7. Conclusion
3. Crisis and the Medicalisation of Poverty
1. Crisis as Discourse: A Brief Genealogy
2. The Constitution of 'Clients in Crisis'
3. A Nudge in the Food Bank
4. Behavioural Activation and (not so) Soft Paternalism
5. Conclusion
4. 'More Than Food'
1. 'More Than Food'
2. "Eat Well - Spend Less"
3. Job Clubs and Social Spaces in Food Banks
4. Conclusion
5. The Psychopolitics of Food Charity
1. From Vulnerability to Wellbeing: Happy Subjects of Charity?
2. Disrupting the Spectacle and Killing Charity's Joy
3. Developing a Shockproof Subject?
4. Refusing Resilience, Positivity and Development
5. Conclusion
6. Concluding Reflections: From Refusal to Innovation
1. Psychology, 'Nudge' Economics and Neoliberalism
2. Liberalism and the Traps of Humanism
3. Absent Voices and Poverty Research
4. Essays in Refusal: The Value of Critique
5. Critique is Not Enough: From "What's to be done?" to "What more am I
to do?"
References