Individualisms and their Discontents: The American Self Versus the French Institution

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 21 (4):311-323 (2014)
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Abstract

The notions of subjectivity, affect, emotion, and moral feelings today impregnate the whole of society, and they are becoming increasingly perceptible in the area of scientific knowledge as well.1 This preoccupation with emotions developed initially in the wake of the advent of a more permissive society in the 1970s, and then with changes in the organization of capitalism, where flexible work has replaced the Taylorist and Fordist models of divided labor, and also with the crisis of the social welfare system in the 1980s. In both Europe and North America, mental suffering and mental health problems have gradually come to occupy a prominent position in daily life in developed societies. Indeed, a vast and varied..

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Alain Ehrenberg
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

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