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Main description:
Technicians of Human Dignity traces the extraordinary rise of human dignity as a defining concern of religious, political, and bioethical institutions over the last half century and offers original insight into how human dignity has become threatened by its own success. The global expansion of dignitarian politics has left dignity without a stable set of meanings or referents, unsettling contemporary economies of life and power.
Engaging anthropology, theology, and bioethics, Bennett grapples with contemporary efforts to mobilize human dignity as a counter-response to the biopolitics of the human body, and the breakdowns this has generated. To do this, he investigates how actors in pivotal institutions -the Vatican, the United Nations, U.S. Federal Bioethics-reconceived human dignity as the bearer of intrinsic worth, only to become frustrated by the Sisyphean struggle of turning its conceptions into practice.
Contents:
Orienting Prologue: From Bioethics to Political Spirituality 1. Figuring Human Dignity I. Human Dignity and the Vatican 2. Human Dignity in the Secular World 3. The Natural and the Supernatural: Human Dignity and the Ontology of the Call II. Human Dignity and the United Nations 4. Incapacity by Design: Politics, Sovereignty, Human Dignity 5. Dignity and Form Diagnostic Excursus: Economies of Life and Power III. Human Dignity & the President's Council on Bioethics 6. Bioethics and the Reconfiguration of Biopolitics 7. Human Dignity and the Biopolitical Pastoral Methodological Epilogue: Toward an Anthropology of Figuration Notes Index
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: November, 2015
Pages: 352
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Ethics