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Diy: The Search for Control and Self-Reliance in the 21st Century

AUTHOR Wehr, Kevin
PUBLISHER Routledge (03/23/2012)
PRODUCT TYPE Paperback (Paperback)

Description

From the driveway mechanic to the backyard gardener, many diverse people are "doing it themselves" by building or repairing the stuff of their daily lives without the aid of experts. Do It Yourself uses Habermas's colonization of the lifeworld as a frame and mobilizes Marx's concepts of alienation and mystification to examine how social behaviors can be a conscious reply to a complex and fast-moving world, a nostalgia for simpler times past, or a just an economic impulse. Each main chapter is anchored by an extended empirical example: back-to-the-land, home-schooling, and self-government.

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Product Format
Product Details
ISBN-13: 9780415508711
ISBN-10: 0415508711
Binding: Paperback or Softback (Trade Paperback (Us))
Content Language: English
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Page Count: 84
Carton Quantity: 50
Product Dimensions: 6.80 x 0.30 x 9.80 inches
Weight: 0.39 pound(s)
Feature Codes: Bibliography, Index, Illustrated
Country of Origin: US
Subject Information
BISAC Categories
Social Science | Customs & Traditions
Social Science | Sociology - General
Social Science | Personal Growth - Happiness
Dewey Decimal: 179.9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012004171
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From the driveway mechanic to the backyard gardener, many diverse people are "doing it themselves" by building or repairing the stuff of their daily lives without the aid of experts. Do It Yourself uses Habermas's colonization of the lifeworld as a frame and mobilizes Marx's concepts of alienation and mystification to examine how social behaviors can be a conscious reply to a complex and fast-moving world, a nostalgia for simpler times past, or a just an economic impulse. Each main chapter is anchored by an extended empirical example: back-to-the-land, home-schooling, and self-government.

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Author: Wehr, Kevin
Kevin Wehr is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the California State University, Sacramento, where he specializes in Environmental Sociology, Political Sociology, Social Theory, Culture, and Criminology. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology in 2002 and his MS in 1998 from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. He received his BA in 1994 from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Selected publications include The Sociology of Bicycle Messengers: The last uncoopted punk rock subculture, forthcoming in 2009 from University Press of America, and America s Fight Over Water: The environmental and political consequences of large-scale dams in the American West published with Routledge Press in 2004, and Dairy Industrialization in the First Place: Urbanization, Immigration, and Political Economy in Los Angeles County, 1920-1970 (co-authored with Jess Gilbert) published in Rural Sociology. 68(4): 467-90 in 2003.His on-going research projects include a quasi-experimental study of pricing mechanisms and conservation behavior during the installation of water meters in Sacramento, California, a quasi-experimental study of High School discipline and entry into the criminal justice system, and an international comparison of water infrastructure development in China, Chile, India, and the US.
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