The skillful self : liberalism, culture, and the politics of skill /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Stopford, John, 1953-
Imprint:Lanham, MD : Lexinton Books, ©2009.
Description:1 online resource (xv, 235 pages)
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11190252
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780739135082
0739135082
0739123343
9780739123348
9780739123348
1282494376
9781282494374
9786612494376
6612494379
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:Developing a political approach to culture that avoids both the pitfalls of neutralism and the perils of perfectionism is among the most urgent tasks facing contemporary liberal theory. Drawing on Rawls's political liberalism as well as recent work by capability theorists and major critics of liberalism, The Skillful Self makes the case for a liberal politics of skill in which the skillful self forms the focus of a nonperfectionist approach to culture and cultural policy.
Other form:Print version: Stopford, John, 1953- Skillful self. Lanham, MD : Lexinton Books, ©2009 9780739123348 0739123343
Standard no.:9786612494376
Description
Summary:The Skillful Self: Liberalism, Culture, and the Politics of Skill presents a political liberal theory of cultural participation and the goals of cultural policy in contemporary pluralistic democracies. The ideal of cultural participation, which many regard as central to the self-conception of modern constitutional democracies, is often subject to the distorting influences of state perfectionism, paternalism, consumerism, and ideology. These distortions and the problems they raise are intensified by the forces of social, cultural, and economic globalization. Using the tools of contemporary liberal theory,The Skillful Self develops an approach to the politics of culture that focuses on the concept of skill and its place in a liberal conception of the self. Support for this approach is derived from the work of Nussbaum and Sen, who make a conception of human capability basic to their views of public policy and the design of political institutions. But the politics of skill modifies the capability approach by characterizing the central human functional capabilities as functions of the skillful self. The final chapters of the book describe the competences of the skillful self, elaborating a new typology of skills and explaining why basic institutions are obliged to promote them. To make the role of skill in the central capabilities explicit in this way is not to invoke the perfectionist ideal of a culture of skill, but rather to focus on the structural role of skill in a nonperfectionist conception of truly human functioning, and on the social conditions of individual capability viewed as a function of skill.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xv, 235 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780739135082
0739135082
0739123343
9780739123348
1282494376
9781282494374
9786612494376
6612494379