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Stress: The Nature and History of Engineered Grief

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Stress: The Nature and History of Engineered Grief

Contributors:

By (Author) Robert Kugelmann

ISBN:

9780275942717

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

17th September 1992

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Social, group or collective psychology
Social and cultural history

Dewey:

155.9

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Weight:

539g

Description

"Stress" names a kind of grief unique to the modern period, a grief perpetually unresolved, evoked by the rapid and relentless changes characteristic of modernity. Because our grief is always unresolved, the passion of mourning is perpetually productive. Stress is also a discourse, a mutation of experience by the external power of speech, a power that can devour what it articulates. Yet, it was not until World War II, when the psychiatric difficulties of pilots and bombers in particular brought stress into the open, that stress became a topic of medical and psychological research and a named cause of disorders. The term borrows the notions of pressure and tension from the engineering world. The seeds of stress are found around 1750, when the notion of luxury changed in meaning from a vice to be avoided to a virtue to be vigorously pursued. Before this time, human existence differed from ours in such a way that we detect no stress or anything like it. The book includes a phenomenology of the experience of stress, a history of the construction of "engineered grief", and an assessment of stress management programs. Because such programs seek to make us comfortable with stress, the book argues that they do not move us to bring the work of grieving to a resolution. This book is intended to be be of interest to post-modernists, phenomenologists, social constructionists, hermeneuticists, deconstructionists, social historians, and medical historians.

Reviews

The book is highly recommended to anyone concerned with how we can best respond to our stressful lives.-Readings
The text is scholarly, extensively footnoted, and includes a 15-page bibliography.-Choice
"The text is scholarly, extensively footnoted, and includes a 15-page bibliography."-Choice
"The book is highly recommended to anyone concerned with how we can best respond to our stressful lives."-Readings

Author Bio

ROBERT KUGELMANN is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Dallas. He is the author of The Windows of the Soul: Psychological Physiology of the Human Eye and Primary Glaucoma (1983).

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