

- Title
The Routledge handbook of dehumanization [electronic resource] / edited by Maria Kronfeldner.
- Imprint
Abingdon : Routledge, 2021.©2021
- Date
01-01-2021
- Physical description
1 online resource (xix, 403 pages).
text
online resource
- Edition
- Item
E-BOOK (Copy 1) EBL 1319287-1001 ONLINE
- URL
- Frequency
- Latest issue
- Major subject
- Minor subject
- Enrichment
- LCSH
- Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Key item
- ISBN
9780429960987
- ISSN
- Abstract
- Contents
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Contributors -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction: Mapping Dehumanization Studies -- Part I: Oscillating Boundaries, Dimensions, and Hierarchies of Humanityin Historical Contexts -- 2. Dehumanization Before the Columbian Exchange -- 3. "Humanity" and its Limits in Early Modern European Thought -- 4. Enlightenment Humanization and Dehumanization, and the Orangutan -- 5. Dehumanizing the Exotic in Living Human Exhibitions -- 6. Dehumanizing Strategies in Nazi Ideology and their Anthropological Context -- 7. Theorizing the Inhumanity of Human Nature, 1955-1985 -- Part II: Further Special Contexts of Dehumanization -- 8. The Social Psychology of Dehumanization -- 9. Dehumanization and the Loss of Moral Standing -- 10. Dehumanization and the Question of Animals -- 11. Dehumanization, Disability, and Eugenics -- 12. Dehumanization and Human Rights -- 13. Dehumanization by Law -- 14. Dehumanization in Literature and the Figure of the Perpetrator -- Part III: The Complex Facets of Dehumanization -- 15. Dehumanization and Social Death as Fundamentals of Racism -- 16. How Status and Interdependence Explain Different Forms of Dehumanization -- 17. Exploring Metadehumanization and Self-Dehumanization from a Target Perspective -- 18. The Dehumanization and Rehumanization of Refugees -- 19. Motivational and Cognitive Underpinnings of Fear of Social Robots that Become "Too Human for Us" -- Part IV: Conceptual and Epistemological Questions Regarding Dehumanization -- 20. Objectification, Inferiorization, and Projection in Phenomenological Research on Dehumanization -- 21. Why Dehumanization is Distinct from Objectification -- 22. On Hatred and Dehumanization -- 23. Dehumanization, the Problem of Humanity and the Problem of Monstrosity -- 24. Psychological Essentialism and Dehumanization -- 25. Could Dehumanization be Perceptual? -- Index.
- LCN
1319287
- Item ID
1319287-1001
- Database
Library Catalogue