The Uses of Disorder Personal Identity and City Life
Social ScienceSociology

The Uses of Disorder Personal Identity and City Life

by Richard Sennett

Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Pages
224
Language
English
Published
1992-08-17

Overview

<p>“[Sennett] has ended up writing the best available contemporary defense of anarchism. . . . The issues [he] raises are fundamental and profound. His book is utopian in the best sense—it tries to define a radically different future and to show that it could be constructed from the materials at hand.” –Kenneth Keniston, New York Times Book Review</p> The distinguished social critic Richard Sennett here shows how the excessively ordered community freezes adults—both the young idealists and their security-oriented parents—into rigid attitudes that stifle personal growth. He argues that the accepted ideal of order generates patterns of behavior among the urban middle classes that are stultifying, narrow, and violence-prone. And he proposes a functioning city that can incorporate anarchy, diversity, and creative disorder to bring into being adults who can openly respond to and deal with the challenges of life.

Posts about this book

No posts about this book yet. Be the first in the app!

Ready to Meet Someone Who Reads Like You?