scholarly journals Irony, Disruption and Moral Imperfection

2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 545-559
Author(s):  
Dieter Declercq

Abstract Irony has a suspicious moral reputation, especially in popular media and internet culture. Jonathan Lear (2011) introduces a proposal which challenges this suspicion and identifies irony as a means to achieve human excellence. For Lear, irony is a disruptive uncanniness which arises from a gap between aspiration and actualisation in our practical identity. According to Lear, such a disruptive experience of ironic uncanniness reorients us toward excellence, because it passionately propels us to really live up to that practical identity. However, Lear’s understanding of irony is idiosyncratic and his proposal overlooks that disruption often results from value incompatibility between different practical identities. The disruption which follows from value incompatibility does not inherently reorient us toward excellence. The point is exactly that achieving excellence in one practical identity is sometimes incompatible with excellence in the other. Pace Lear, I do not identify this disruptive experience as a central example of irony. Instead, I consider irony a virtuous coping strategy for such disruption, because it introduces the necessary distance from our moral imperfection to sustain practical deliberation and maintain good mental health. Such virtuous irony negotiates a golden mean between too little disruption (complete insensitivity toward one’s imperfection) and too much disruption (a complete breakdown of practical deliberation and mental health). I argue that ironic media in popular culture provide a rich source of such virtuous irony, which I demonstrate through analysis of satirical examples.

Ecopiety ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Sarah McFarland Taylor

This chapter outlines the structure and thesis of the book while introducing the concept of “ecopiety”―a shorthand term used in this text to refer to practices of environmental (or “green”) virtue. The chapter also introduces the reader to the book’s featured “sightings” of ecopiety, as observed mostly in and through NorthAmerican consumer marketing and mediated popular culture. This book argues that the fundamentally individualized, free-market, privatized, voluntary approaches currently marketed as adequate to addressing our monumental environmental challenges are not only wholly inadequate to the task but indeed can be counterproductive in the worst possible ways. Ecopiety, as marketed, is both too dourly restrictive in some ways and grossly facile in others. It simultaneously asks too little and too much, making pious actions taken on behalf of the environment grim, unappealing, onerous “duties or obligations,” on one hand, while on the other, it offers superficial, perfunctory modes of practice that are byandlarge insignificant in terms of scale and scope of impact. The author proposes alternatives for creative cultural paths into the future, as conjured by a variety of environmentally themed popular media works, practices, and narratives.


Author(s):  
Evan Renfro ◽  
Jayme Neiman Renfro

Since before the founding of the United States through slavery, the extermination of the native populace, war after war, regime overthrow, and more wars, popular media have been used to stir resentments and produce violent fantasies in the general citizenry that often allow for policies of actual violence to be applied against “the other.” This chapter will analyze the affective coordinates of this system in the post-9/11 context, focusing especially on how nationalist-jingoism has now triumphed in the age of the Trump Administration. Crucial interrogations addressed in this chapter include: Why are white southern/rural males particularly susceptible to popular culture induced affective violence? What are the mechanics of profit and neoliberal imperatives of this structure? What is new about the linkage of these phenomena with the first Twitter-President? In pursuing these questions, the authors will use case studies involving the popular media vectors of television, film, and music.


Author(s):  
Claire Luscombe

This chapter examines the correlation between mental health and multiple exclusions. Health inequalities result from inequalities in the conditions of daily life and because of the fundamental drivers that give rise to them, that is, inequalities in power, money and resources. A key component of this process of exclusion is mental health. Poor mental health is both a contributor to and a consequence of exclusion. On the other hand, good mental health is a crucial aspect of facilitating inclusion. The chapter first defines multiple exclusions before discussing research about people experiencing homelessness, prevalence of mental health disorders within the population, and why understanding multiple exclusions is important. It also analyses the implications of the mental health-multiple exclusions nexus for service delivery.


The word inability is the major threat among the people which focus on which aspect they differ from one to the other. Mobility aids were introduced to ease the mobility of the patients so that they can perform the normal activities to manage the way they differ. The normal activities that a person could perform provide a good mental health to the patients. Generally, the patients are kept in the bed and then transferred to the stretcher in case of any emergency; this transfer may injure the patient as he is already a sufferer. Sometimes the patient who is already confined to bed uses wheelchair for their movement, but the earlier designs of wheelchair could not provide the position of comfort to the patient. All these issues have got a solution through the design of wireless heartbeat monitoring PRAM which provides the comfort position and the degree of comfort could also be adjusted according their comfortness. In addition this could also monitor the pulse rate and the temperature of the patient who avail the pram. The position of the wheelchair could adjust itself if the sensed parameters are abnormal. Hence the wheelchair and stretcher are the commonly used mobility aiding parameters that would need a revolution to ease the purpose and this becomes possible by this electrical design..


1992 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-330
Author(s):  
Richard H. Price

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