Normlessness: the lack of social norms
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Episode Summary (Dot Points)Understanding Cybercrime through Strain and Anomie TheoriesDr. Dearden explains how strain theory and anomie theory provide insights into cybercriminal motivations.Discussion on economic and social pressures that push individuals toward cybercrime, including unemployment, inequality, and lack of upward mobility.The Role of Honeypots in Cybercrime ResearchOverview of honeypots—deceptive systems designed to attract cyber attackers.How honeypots help researchers observe and analyze hacker behaviors in real-world settings.Differences in hacking techniques and motivations across different regions.Regional Variations in Cybercriminal ActivitiesWhy cybercrime is not uniformly distributed worldwide despite the internet being a global network.Case studies on West African romance scams, Russian cyber operations, and Indian call center frauds.The interplay between legitimate and illegitimate economies in cybercrime hotspots.Cybercrime and Economic OpportunityFindings from recent research on how financial strain vs. greed influences cybercrime.The role of cryptocurrency in enabling financial cybercrimes and providing anonymity to offenders.Discussion on how cybercrime prevention strategies need to address offender motivations, not just security vulnerabilities.Future Research and Policy ImplicationsThe need for broader, structural changes to mitigate cybercrime, rather than relying solely on reactive security measures.How cross-national studies and criminological data collection can improve cybercrime prevention strategies.Upcoming projects on measuring cyber-offending patterns and regional differences in hacking behavior.About Our GuestDr. Thomas Deardenhttps://liberalarts.vt.edu/departments-and-schools/department-of-sociology/faculty/thomas-dearden.htmlPapers and Resources Mentioned in This EpisodeDearden, T. E., & Gottschalk, P. (2024).Convenience Theory and Cybercrime Opportunity: An Analysis of Online Cyberoffending.Deviant Behavior.DOI LinkParti, K., & Dearden, T. (2024).Cybercrime and Strain Theory: An Examination of Online Crime and Gender.International Journal of Criminology and Sociology. https://doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2024.13.19Dearden, T. E., Parti, K., & Hawdon, J. (2022).Institutional Anomie Theory and Cybercrime: Cybercrime and the American Dream.Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice. https://doi.org/10.1177/10439862211001590 Related Episodes Featuring Dr. DeardenEpisode 39 : Strained Dreams: Cybercrime and Institutional Anomiehttps://www.cybercrimeology.com/episodes/strained-dreams-cybercrime-and-institutional-anomie Other:The Human Factors in cybercrime Conference: https://www.hfc-conference.comWe had a chat in a room with a bunch of people just outside having their own great conversations. Kind of nice to get a little bit of that vibe into the mix. Conferences can be a lot of fun ;)/.To the best of my knowledge, no bovines were harmed during the recording of this episode.
NETFLIX Día 17. De vuelta a la acción. Quince años después de abandonar la CIA para formar una familia, los espías de élite Matt y Emily vuelven al mundo del espionaje cuando se quedan sin tapadera. Protagonizada por:Jamie Foxx, Cameron Diaz, Glenn Close Día 23. El agente nocturno. Temporada 2. Unidos por una llamada a medianoche, un agente del FBI y una experta en ciberseguridad deben desentrañar una intrincada red de conspiraciones políticas. Día 24. Supermachos. Temporada 1. Cuatro amigos de mediana edad lidian con las crisis amorosas, personales y profesionales en el París de hoy en día... ¿Por qué ahora los hombres lo tienen tan crudo? Día 24. Héroes de guardia. Temporada 1. Un experimentado médico militar llega a un centro de trauma y convierte a su equipo en una unidad salvavidas de élite gracias a sus métodos bruscos pero eficaces. Max 18 de Enero. REAL TIME WITH BILL MAHER. Temporada 23 22 de Enero. LOS GEMELOS REFORMAN DOS VECES: EDICIÓN CELEBRITY. Temporada 8 24 de Enero. EL HOMBRE QUE JUGÓ CON FUEGO. Nueva docuserie. Apasionante serie documental que explora el asesinato en 1986 del primer ministro de Suecia, Olof Palme, un caso denominado 'el JFK de Europa', y la extraordinaria investigación del autor Stieg Larsson sobre el caso. 24 de Enero. CORMORAN STRIKE: UN CORAZÓN TAN NEGRO. Nueva serie. Strike y Robin son contratados para investigar un asesinato en el que están implicados el creador de unos dibujos animados de culto y un troll anónimo de Internet conocido como «Anomie». Con una compleja red de alias online, intereses empresariales y conflictos familiares que sortear, nuestra heroica pareja se encuentra en un caso que les pone al límite con la amenaza de este misterioso asesino a la vuelta de cada esquina. 26 de Enero. COMO (NO) DESHACERSE DE UN CADÁVER. Nuevo programa. Explora las extravagantes medidas que toman los asesinos diabólicos para salirse con la suya. Estos retorcidos cerebros criminales hacen ingeniosos esfuerzos para deshacerse de sus víctimas, pero los mejores detectives del país están empeñados en resolver estos atroces crímenes. Disney+ 23 de Enero. High Potential. Escrita por Drew Goddard (“The Good Place”, “The Martian”) y protagonizada por la actriz Kaitlin Olson que da vida a una madre soltera con una mente excepcional, cuyo don poco convencional para resolver crímenes, la lleva a una inusual vinculación con un detective experimentado (Daniel Sunjata). Basada en la popular serie francesa “Haut Potentiel Intellectuel”. 24 de Enero. Canina. Película. Una mujer (Amy Adams) pausa su carrera profesional para ejercer de madre y ama de casa, pero pronto su nueva vida da un giro surrealista. 24 de Enero. Custodia repartida. Nueva serie original de Disney+ y la primera serie del director de cine Javier Fesser (“Campeones”, “Campeonex”). Los 8 capítulos de la serie cuentan la historia de Cris y Diego, que se acaban de separar y, como pareja moderna que son, tienen intención de hacerlo sin abogados: quieren seguir siendo amigos. Pero el objetivo no será fácil. La vida es dura, y las separaciones más… sobre todo si tienes que volver a vivir a casa de tus padres. No importa que tengan a Cloe, una niña de cinco años, o que superen los cuarenta.
Diese Episode beschäftigt sich mit einer sehr komplexen Theorie, der Institutionellen Anomietheorie, auch IAT genannt. Sie versucht die Mikro-Ebene, auf der sich Merton bewegte, mit der Makro-Ebene (gesellschaftliche Strukturen, Institutionen) zu verbinden.
Emilio Ocampo is a professor of finance and economic history at UCEMA. He has written widely on the Argentine economy and has advised President Javier Milei on economic policy. Emilio joins David on Macro Musings to talk about the current state of the Argentine economy, the present and ongoing reforms of President Milei, and the prospects for dollarization in Argentina. Transcript for this week's episode. Emilio's Twitter: @ocampo_emilio Emilio's Substack Emilio's UCEMA profile David Beckworth's Twitter: @DavidBeckworth Follow us on Twitter: @Macro_Musings Check out our new AI chatbot: the Macro Musebot! Join the new Macro Musings Discord server! Join the Macro Musings mailing list! Check out our Macro Musings merch! Related Links: *Commitment Devices with Time Inconsistency Disease and Institutional Anomie: The Case of Argentina* by Emilio Ocampo *Dollarization: A Solution for Argentina* by Emilio Ocampo and Nicolas Cachanosky *Argentina Scrapped Its Rent Controls. Now the Market is Thriving* by Ryan Dube Timestamps: (00:00:00) – Intro (00:03:58) – Assessing Argentina's Progress on Lowering Inflation (00:11:12) – Exploring the Causes of Argentina's Poor Economic Performance (00:15:20) – *Commitment Devices with Time Inconsistency Disease and Institutional Anomie* (00:26:29) – Javier Milei's Plan to Revive Argentina (00:31:39) – The Next Steps for Argentine Economic Reform (00:39:56) – Defining Dollarization and Exploring its Historical Cases (00:49:33) – Transitioning to Dollarization in Argentina (00:55:12) – Dollarization Concerns and the Prospects for Dollarization Moving Forward (00:58:48) – Outro
In episode 502 of Passion Struck, we tackle a subject that's hitting hard in our world right now: cynicism. Cynicism creeps into our thoughts, erodes our connections, and chips away at our belief in one another. To help us untangle this, we have an extraordinary guest, Dr. Jamil Zaki, a professor of psychology at Stanford University and an expert in empathy and kindness. His new book, Hope for Cynics: The Surprising Science of Human Goodness, reveals how we can overcome cynicism through hopeful skepticism.Dr. Zaki shares powerful insights from over two decades of research on how to escape the cynicism trap and boost your mental well-being. We discuss the myth of the cynical genius, how to combat polarization, and foster a more unified world. Dr. Zaki also delves into his personal journey, including how his parents' difficult divorce influenced his study of empathy and understanding others.Full show notes and resources: https://passionstruck.com/jamil-zaki-science-of-human-goodnessSponsorsBabbel: Unlock the power of learning a new language with Babbel's innovative system. Passion Struck listeners can get 60% off their subscription at Babbel.com/PASSION.Hims: Regrow your hair before it's too late! Start your free online visit today at Hims.com/PASSIONSTRUCK.Quince: Experience luxury for less with Quince's premium products at radically low prices. Enjoy free shipping and 365-day returns at Quince.com/PASSION.For more information about our sponsors and promo codes, visit: passionstruck.com/dealsIn this episode, you will learn:The impact of cynicism on personal and social livesThe role of cynicism in US politics and worldwideHow cynicism affects society's ability to address major issuesThe harmful effects of cynicism on health, relationships, and careersThe misconception that cynics are smarter and socially smarterThe importance of adopting hopeful skepticism to combat cynicismThe case study of Microsoft's organizational cynicism under Steve BallmerConnect with Jamil Zaki: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamil-zaki-b0b4a9192/Order Passion StruckUnlock the principles that will transform your life! Order my book, Passion Struck: Twelve Powerful Principles to Unlock Your Purpose and Ignite Your Most Intentional Life. Recognized as a 2024 must-read by the Next Big Idea Club, this book has earned accolades such as the Business Minds Best Book Award, the Eric Hoffer Award, and the Non-Fiction Book Awards Gold Medal. Order your copy today and ignite your journey toward intentional living!Catch More Passion StruckCan't miss my episode with Angela Duckworth on the Keys to Achieving Long-Term SuccessListen to my interview withBJ Fogg on How Tiny Habits Can Transform Your LifeWatch my episode with Dacher Keltner on the Hidden Power of Moral BeautyCatch my interview with Katy Milkman on Creating Lasting Behavior Change for GoodIf you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review! Even one sentence helps. Be sure to include your Twitter or Instagram handle so we can personally thank you!
In dieser KrimShort spricht Marie über den Befähigungsansatz (Capability-Ansatz) von dem Ökonom und Philosoph Amartya Sen, den er teilweise in Zusammenarbeit mit der Philosophin Martha Nussbaum und anderen Kolleg:innen erarbeitet und weiterentwickelt hat. Dieser Denkansatz fordert, bei der Evaluation von Reichtum und Armut über die meistens verwendeten Standardkennzahlen, wie Einkommen, BIP oder BNE, hinaus zu blicken. Sen argumentiert, dass lieber die tatsächlichen Verwirklichungschancen eines Menschen gemessen werden sollten, da diese aussagekräftiger als die Standardkennzahlen seien. Neben einem tieferen Verständnis für Armut/Reichtum weist dieser Ansatz sogar Ähnlichkeiten zu einer bestimmten kriminologischen Theorie auf. Zu welcher, das hört ihr in der Folge!
Diesmal geht es um die General Strain Theory (GST) von Robert Agnew und Kolleg:innen. Auch sie gehört zu den Anomie- und Strain-Theorien und baut auf den älteren Theorien von Durkheim, Merton, Cohen und Co auf. Sie versucht, die Kritik, die an den älteren Theorien geübt wurde, zu überwinden und die Ursachen für kriminelles Verhalten als Coping-Strategie weiterzudenken. Hierbei spielen vor allem Strains und negative Emotionen eine wichtige Rolle. Eine sehr spannende, komplexe und vor allem aktuelle Theorie, die man als KrimNerd unbedingt kennen sollte!
Hat Tip to this week's creators: @tedgioia, @benthompson, @stratechery, @peterwalker99, @omri_drory, @sama, @mariogabriele, @gruber, @giannandrea, @craigfederighi, @gregjoz, @alex, @MParekh, @waxeditorial, @romaindillet, @cookie, @ttunguz, @KantrowitzContents* Editorial: Checkmate!* Essays of the Week* Is Silicon Valley Building Universe 25?* Apple Intelligence is Right On Time* 2018 cohort graduation rates?* How VCs Become A******s* Startup Playbook* How to Find a Unicorn* Video of the Week* John Gruber, John Giannandrea, Craig Federighi, and Greg Joswiak on Apple Intelligence* AI of the Week* OpenAI's growth is one of the most astounding business results of all time* AI: New Focus on 'Accelerated' Local AI Devices. RTZ #387* News Of the Week* visionOS 2: Spatial Personas Can Touch Fingers, High Five, Fist Bump Each Other With Visual and Audio Feedback* Raspberry Pi is now a public company* Carta's valuation to be cut by $6.5 billion in upcoming secondary sale* LinkedIn Adds New Elements to Its Newsletter Creation Platform* Startup of the Week* Databricks' Accelerating Growth* X of the Week* 3, 3 Trillion Dollar CompaniesEditorial: Checkmate!Checkmate! That seems like the appropriate word if you analyze what happened with OpenAI this week.After being built into every conceivable Microsft interface, Apple announced that it would integrate OpenAI into all of its operating systems across devices via Siri.By locking up Microsoft and Apple, it has effectively locked out Google, at least for now. That will leave Google itself as the only large implementation of its Gemini AI family.This gives Apple a global advantage in the iPhone versus Android battle. Few will prefer Gemini to OpenAI.Beyond that, Apple successfully showed how its own ‘Apple Intelligence' will face inwards to the device, interoperating with all apps and supporting ‘actions' while leaving all user data on the device. And when you need more power than the device can deliver, the new Apple Intelligence Cloud steps up in a fully encrypted secure environment. Even Apple cannot decrypt your data as it has no keys.Ben Thompson from Stratechery sums up Apple's play as follows:This is good news for Apple in two respects. First, with regards to the title of this Article, the fact it is possible to be too early with AI features, as Microsoft seemed to be in this case, implies that not having AI features does not mean you are too late. Yes, AI features could differentiate an existing platform, but they could also diminish it. Second, Apple's orientation towards prioritizing users over developers aligns nicely with its brand promise of privacy and security: Apple would prefer to deliver new features in an integrated fashion as a matter of course; making AI not just compelling but societally acceptable may require exactly that, which means that Apple is arriving on the AI scene just in time.The concept of “just in time” seems appropriate. Although, as a developer possessing all of the beta products, I can say that very few of the features announced are yet available.The contrast with Microsoft couldn't be more extreme. Its Recall product, which took a screen recording every five seconds and stored its findings in clear text on the device, got a backlash from journalists and privacy campaigners. Microsoft has all but canceled the product, and its PR tail is between its legs. Apple's ‘Crush' ad has almost been forgotten.Microsoft could make a mistake here. It is already working on products competing with OpenAI and might be tempted to go alone. What Bing is to Google, Microsoft AI will be to OpenAI. If it does so, it will once again shoot itself in the foot. OpenAI is far ahead in features and capabilities. Google cannot integrate it. Microsoft has gained an advantage from having done so. Apple too. Don't bite the hand that feeds you seems an apt reminder.This week's essays focus a lot on the social impact of innovation and venture capital.Ted Gioia's essay about “Universe 25” focuses on the Durkheim concept of ‘anomie.' It is the idea that our isolation leads to meaninglessness in life.“More than 100 years ago, sociologist Emile Durkheim studied the problem of anomie. That's not a word you hear very often nowadays. But we need to bring it back.Anomie is a sense that life has no purpose or meaning. The people who suffer from it are listless, disconnected, and prone to mental illnesses of various sorts. Durkheim believed, for example, that suicide was frequently caused by anomie.But the most shocking part of Durkheim's analysis was his view that anomie increased when social norms were lessened. You might think that people rejoice when rules and regulations get eliminated. But Durkheim believed the exact opposite.”Gioia examines the aimlessness of a world where people live in social media.The Venture Capital essays are excellent. Sam Altman's ‘Startup Playbook' contains intelligent advice for startup founding teams. And Mario Gabriele's piece about ‘How to Find a Unicorn' has good advice for emerging fund managers. Omri Drory's piece: How VCs Become A******s - is both funny and true. A great read This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thatwastheweek.com/subscribe
ATC 241 Palmarès franco Québéc Février Cette semaine, je vous propose mon palmarès de chansons québécoises et franco-canadiennes pour ce mois de février. J'ai sélectionné Navet Confit, Charles Robert, Galaxie Quanart, Grand Public, Faux Soleil, et Margaret Tracteur. On commence ce palmarès franco-québécois et d'autres provinces et territoires du Canada avec Navet Confit, qui, depuis plusieurs années, a réussi à marquer le paysage musical du Québec de son empreinte musicale grâce à son originalité et à son désir affirmé de bousculer les conventions. C'est toujours dans l'ADN de Navet Confit, car pour ce début d'année, il nous propose le titre "Changer d'heure", extrait de son futur et prometteur EP intitulé "Désolé Mouvement Geste". Dans ce titre, Navet Confit s'interroge sur la pertinence de changer d'heure. Est-ce réellement utile ? Est-ce une question d'économie d'énergie ou de rendre le monde plus beau ? Une réponse claire et précise est formulée dans la chanson. Avec Galaxie (anciennement Galaxie 500), Ford, le constructeur automobile, a demandé, via leurs avocats, de retirer le "500" de leur nom. La Galaxie 500 était la voiture de police américaine dans les années 60. Après cette digression automobile, parlons d'Olivier Langevin, membre de Galaxie, musicien fétiche de Fred Fortin, originaire du Lac Saint-Jean. Olivier Langevin, esprit créatif derrière Galaxie, nous revient avec un nouvel opus intitulé "Anomie", promettant de secouer les ondes. "Anomie" signifie absence d'organisation ou de loi, à ne pas confondre avec l'anarchie, qui est l'absence d'autorité. Dans "Anomie", Galaxie nous invite sur la piste de danse. "Mille fragments" (remix) de Charles Robert Nous changeons d'ambiance et plongeons dans l'univers électro de Charles Robert avec son dernier coup de génie : le remix de "Mille fragments". Ce titre transforme tout espace en piste de danse. Charles ne se contente pas de mixer des sons ; il danse sa vie dans un clip invitant à la vulnérabilité et à la liberté. Après le succès de "Magique", Charles nous offre "Mille fragments", un hymne à l'audace de s'exprimer pleinement. Laissez-vous emporter par cette vague électro-pop qui invite à la danse et à la célébration de la vie. "Pleine lune" de Quanart Quanart, avec un "Q" et un "T", s'il vous plaît, ajoute une touche de fantaisie. Notre virtuose de l'émotion nous présente "Pleine lune", tiré de son deuxième EP "Quanart". Cette chanson franco-pop rock aux teintes grunge nous enveloppe dans une douceur électro, sensible et dansante, qui canalise l'énergie lunaire. À travers des paroles introspectives et poétiques, Quanart nous invite à nous perdre en pensées sous la pleine lune, nous rappelant notre connexion à l'univers. Grand Public marque son retour avec le single "Torrent de compliments", explorant les subtilités de l'esprit humain avec un style krautrock lo-fi. Ce morceau ausculte le paradoxe de se satisfaire d'illusions, offrant un son irrésistible. La voix est volontairement sous-mixée, un choix audacieux pour les auditeurs attentifs. Errance Faux Soleil Nous découvrons un duo avec Shawn Jobin, de la Saskatchewan, et Squerl Noir, de l'Ontario. Shawn et Squerl, deux rappeurs mélodiques et poétiques, s'unissent pour Faux Soleil, humanisant l'univers de la musique électronique. "Errance", leur premier morceau, invite à une immersion dans leur monde sonore distinctif, inspiré par la quiétude de l'hiver canadien, mêlant techno mélodieuse et bande sonore grandiose. Nous écoutons maintenant "La fin des haricots" de Margaret Tracteur. Ce premier album plonge dans l'essence du folklore nord-américain, embrassant une gamme élargie de styles musicaux. "L'heure du thé avec Margaret Tracteur" est une invitation à parcourir un univers de récits musicaux, où chaque chanson est un essai sur la vie. "La fin des haricots" évoque des moments de désespoir quotidien avec humour, transformant les épreuves en un début d'espoir. On se donne rendez-vous après les vacances de février. Portez-vous bien.
Was, schon wieder eine Anomietheorie? Yessss! In der achten KrimShort geht es um Robert Merton's Erklärungsversuch für kriminelles Verhalten von Menschen. Mit seiner Theorie versucht er zu erklären, welche strukturellen Faktoren Menschen dazu verleiten, abweichend oder aber gesellschafts- und regelkonform zu handeln. Eine spannende Theorie, die zu jedem Kriminologie-Studium gehört - also absolut hörenswert für alle KrimNerds unter euch!
Today, we cover chapters 102 through 107 of The Ink Black Heart with Paula of StrikeFans.com. We discuss Strike and Robin's interview with Grant and Heather Ledwell, the final showdown between Robin and Anomie, and the ending of the book. Last minute predictions for The Running Grave start around the 2 hour and 27 minute mark. Links: https://www.amazon.com/Ching-Complete-Divination-Kit-Instruction/dp/1398808539/ref=sr_1_1?crid=ERIR35CGLPFD&keywords=I+Ching+Complete+Divination+Kit&qid=1694058948&sprefix=i+ching+complete+divination+kit%2Caps%2C242&sr=8-1 https://fartingsofafaculty.blogspot.com/search/label/TRG%20Preview www.twitter.com/RobinEllacotFan www.twitter.com/thesefilespod www.facebook.com/thesefilespod http://thesefilespod.tumblr.com www.thesefilespod.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thesefilespod/message
Today, we cover chapters 98-102 of The Ink Black Heart. We discuss Robin's important breakthrough in the Anomie case, her admission to Strike, and Strike's confrontation with Tim Ashcroft-the-pedophile. Links: www.twitter.com/thesefilespod www.facebook.com/thesefilespod http://thesefilespod.tumblr.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thesefilespod/message
In dieser Episode geht es um einen Mann, der den Grundstein für alle heute existierenden Anomie- und Strain-Theorien gelegt hat: Émile Durkheim. Franzose, Dozent und Wissenschaftler. Grob gesagt versuchen Anomie- und Strain-Theorien zu erklären, warum Menschen unter bestimmten gesellschaftlichen Belastungsumständen kriminell handeln. Durkheims Anomie-Begriff ist für die Kriminologie super wichtig, um darauf aufbauend weitere Theorien verstehen zu können. Wenn ihr also herausfinden möchtet, welche Theorien es in der Kriminologie gibt, um die Ursachen für Kriminalität zu erklären, dann solltet ihr euch diesen Wissenshappen nicht entgehen lassen! ***Trigger-Warnung*** In dieser Folge geht es am Ende auch kurz um Suizidraten. Falls es euch oder jemandem, den/die ihr kennt, nicht gut gehen sollte, denkt bitte daran, dass ihr euch immer Hilfe holen könnt. Z. B. bei der Telefon-Seelsorge (0800-1110111) oder auch ganz einfach bei der 112.
Bside incoming: Nocui Welcome back to Bside! Summertime is in full swing and show #169 with our guest Nouci sure brings them glorious rays. Nocui (Leo Di Fiore), is an Italian native who has a rich and diverse musical background. Starting life as a talented multi-instrumentalist in classical music in Rome, he was immersed in musical theory and inspired by top Italian musicians. As a teenarger he was captivated by electronic music and started DJing and collecting records as young as 14. Moving to Boston in his later teens he was fascinated by the thriving jazz scene which heavily shaped his taste. Now he lives in Berlin and has honed all of his earlier influences into his own productions and created the label, Shapeless Culture. His recently released EP, Anomie gained praise from the likes of MixMag came about when he returned to Rome to look after his father, with many of the tracks a cathartic experience that brought them closer. Check it out here - https://nocui.bandcamp.com/album/anomie-2 The records that Nocui selects for this bside podcast you could say reflects his own musical journey throughout his life with changing times, countries and styles. It opens with some 80's Italian disco/funk records that would have been prominent in his childhood, before moving to uplifting American house and jazz that he would have heard in Boston nightclubs. Next he moves to modern electronic music which has influenced his own productions in Berlin, before ending with soothing ambient records. Enjoy! Check Nocui's instagram - https://www.instagram.com/nocui_ And his soundcloud -https://soundcloud.com/nocui His Bandcamp - https://nocui.bandcamp.com/ Shapless Culture - https://shapelessculture.bandcamp.com/ Thanks to Molly Hickey for the beautiful artwork as always. www.instagram.com/mollyth.art/ Follow the Bside Instagram for updates/news/vinyl and general music chat: www.instagram.com/bsidepodcasts/
We're back this week for a new episode, this time covering chapters 68-72. In this episode, we discuss Strike's reaction to Robin's interview with Pez, the threat from The Halvening becoming reality, and the latest Anomie update from the Met. Links: www.twitter.com/thesefilespod www.facebook.com/thesefilespod http://thesefilespod.tumblr.com www.thesefilespod.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thesefilespod/message
Riley Suffers An Aneurysm. In this episode, we discuss the topic of the will while reading Anselm's treatise on free will and its ramifications for faith, piety, and pastoral care. SHOW NOTES: On Free Will https://faculty.fordham.edu/klima/Blackwell-proofs/MP_C41.pdf Ontological Arguments https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ontological-arguments/ Moral influence theory of atonement https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_influence_theory_of_atonement Vivarium https://www.justwatch.com/us/movie/vivarium Anomie https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anomie SUPPORT: 1517 Podcast Network https://www.1517.org/podcasts/ Support the work of 1517 https://www.1517.org/donate Warrior Priest Gym & Podcast https://thewarriorpriestpodcast.wordpress.com St John's Lutheran Church (Webster, MN) - FB Live Bible Study Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/356667039608511 Gillespie's Sermons and Catechesis: http://youtube.com/stjohnrandomlake Gillespie Coffee https://gillespie.coffee Gillespie Media https://gillespie.media Tin Foil Haloes https://t.me/bannedpastors The Withertongue Emails: A Pastor's Satanic Temptation, with Apologies to C.S. Lewis https://shop.1517.org/products/the-withertongue-emails-a-pastor-s-satanic-temptation-with-apologies-to-c-s-lewis SUBSCRIBE: YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsvLQ5rlaInxLO9luAauF4A Rumble https://rumble.com/c/c-1223313 Odysee https://odysee.com/@bannedbooks:5 Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/banned-books/id1370993639 Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/2ahA20sZMpBxg9vgiRVQba Stitcher https://www.stitcher.com/s?fid=214298 Overcast https://overcast.fm/itunes1370993639/banned-books Google Podcasts https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9iYW5uZWRib29rcy5saWJzeW4uY29tL3Jzcw TuneIn Radio https://tunein.com/podcasts/Religion--Spirituality-Podcasts/Banned-Books-p1216972/ iHeartRadio https://www.iheart.com/podcast/263-banned-books-29825974/ CONTACT and FOLLOW: Email mailto:BannedBooks@1517.org Facebook https://www.facebook.com/BannedBooksPod/ Twitter https://twitter.com/bannedbooks1517
About our Guest:Thomas Deardenhttps://liberalarts.vt.edu/departments-and-schools/department-of-sociology/faculty/thomas-dearden.htmlScott Wrighthttps://www.linkedin.com/in/scottwright/https://clickarmor.caMentioned in this Episode:France moving away from deterrence.“using a deterrent approach in cyberspace that would force any attacker to exercise restraint against France is fanciful, but adopting response strategies that galvanise all the options the State has available, both European and international, means cyber attacks can be made particularly costly for attackers”- pp 131, page 39.Secrétariat général de la défense et de la sécurité nationale (2022) National strategic review 2022 République Françaisehttp://www.sgdsn.gouv.fr/uploads/2022/12/rns-uk-20221202.pdfAustralia moving towards deterrence.Reuters 2022, 11 November Australia unveils joint cyber police taskforce to 'hunt down' hackershttps://www.reuters.com/technology/australia-unveils-joint-cyber-police-taskforce-hunt-down-hackers-2022-11-12/The name of the mobile game developed in Vietnam was Flappy Bird.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flappy_Bird Other:Apologies for the audio in this one, we were in a room that suddenly became a lot more crowded after we pressed record. If you hear yourself in the background, next time come over and say 'hi'.
We're back this week for a new episode, this time covering chapters 31-33 of part 2 of The Ink Black Heart with StrikeFans.com co-creator Paula. In this week's episode, we discuss Anomie's plans for Comic Con, some fantastic irony in the epigraph for chapter 32, and our mutual hatred of Inigo Upcott. Links: https://www.theguardian.com/books/2012/jan/16/poem-of-the-week-amy-levy https://www.poetrybyheart.org.uk/poems/philosophy/ http://strikefans.com/lisburne-road/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thesefilespod/message
Today's exciting episode of Electronically Yours features American songwriter, synthesist and producer Dave Gamson, most famous in the UK for his iconic work on Scritti Politti's seminal 80's albums Cupid and Psyche, Provision and Anomie & Bonhomie. His incredible list of production and writing credits includes Kesha, Kelly Clarkson, Jessie J, Adam Lambert, Chaka Khan, Charli XCX, Meshell Ndegeocello, Sheila E., George Benson, Luther Vandross, Donny Osmond, Miles Davis, Al Jarreau, Tony LeMans, Roger Troutman and Eden XO. Without his skills, the 80's would never have sounded as good, and his contribution to the Neo-Soul genre is huge… Ladies and gentlemen, stylish synthesis personified, David Gamson... If you can, please support the Electronically Yours podcast via my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/electronicallyours
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Anomie is a sense of defeatism, and it is one of the most common ailments infecting the West. Interesting both the right and left are infected. There is a pervading sense of hopelessness sweeping our people and our institutions, as if nothing can be done, as if the battle is already lost. We have been conditioned to think of ourselves as victims and to rely on the state to rescue us. It is the state that is the problem and the more we depend on the state the more dependent and hopeless we will become.
We're back this week for a new episode, covering chapters 5-7 of The Ink Black Heart. In this episode, we discuss background characters we are worried about, Robin's meeting with Edie and our first bits of background information about Anomie and The Ink Black Heart cartoon's rise to fame. Links: https://www.hogwartsprofessor.com/ink-black-heart-anomie-and-the-veil-a-question-of-connection-and-isolation www.thesefilespod.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thesefilespod/message
This week the Bow Tie Guy takes a look at how to change our nouns. In recovery it is important to change the people, places, and things that we do and spent time with in order to stay sober. That means we need to change our nouns! The Song of the Week is from Katie Nichole and Big Daddy Weave. You can support the ministry financially by texting the word "MuM" to 760- WALLS-CA.
Unter dem Pseudonym Robert Galbraith schreibt Harry-Potter-Erfinderin J.K. Rowling Krimis, der neueste heißt „Das tiefschwarze Herz“. Dieses Mal muss sich das Ermittlerduo Robin Ellacott und Cormoran Strike mit der Online-Welt auseinandersetzen.Elena Gorgis im Gespräch mit Frank Meyerwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, LesartDirekter Link zur Audiodatei
Regardless of how we cut it - we live in a society that is constantly bombarding us with ideals and ways to think, live, abide by, - but when we let society dictate how we're “supposed” to carry ourselves, how we're supposed to live, breathe, be, do, go, do, act, be - And as humans go - conformity makes sense, it allows us security - a sense of community, the safety of acceptance + being part of a group that can look out for each other and protect each other. It's a part of our basic survival. Webster dictionary presents two interpretations for "conformity," the simple definition, “behavior that is the same as the behavior of most other people in a society, group,” and the full definition “action in accordance with some specified standard or authority.” Therefore, breaking from conformity entirely seems utterly impossible. Though nonconformist acts can be from dressing a certain way to becoming an activist against a customary practice. The least we can do is try to break away from social standards that are holding us back. TUNE IN ON PATREON: www.patreon.com/MYDBpodcastSEE MY FACE + OTHER CONTENT: www.youtube.com/juliemericaGET A MONTHLY NOTE FROM ME: www.makeyourdamnbedpodcast.comTUNE IN ON INSTAGRAM FOR DAILY(ish) QUOTES: www.instagram.com/mydbpodcast luh you. and don't forget to drink your damn water. Get bonus content on PatreonSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/make-your-damn-bed. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.
En Música de Contrabando, revista diaria de música en Onda Regional de Murcia (hoy vamos de 23,05 a 01,00h)Roxy Music se reúne para celebrar su 50 aniversario con una gira que recorrerá Estados Unidos, Canadá y Reino Unido.El cartel del Bilbao BBK Live suma nombres internacionales como Kelly Lee Owens, WOS, Romy o Nilüfer Yanya y embajadores de la escena estatal como Rigoberta Bandini, Alizzz o Cariño. El festival, que se celebrará los días 7, 8 y 9 de julio en Kobetamendi, contará con la presencia de más de 100 artistas; desde estrellas consagradas hasta promesas al alza. Everything Everything te trasladan festivas sensaciones nocturnas de un viernes en "i want a love like this", nuevo adelanto de bailable pop de Raw data feel. Man Man estrena "dig deep", resplandeciente nuevo single con el que anuncia fechas en su país.Jose House es el tercer adelanto de Trovador Tecno, el nuevo álbum de Joe Crepúsculo que saldrá a la venta el próximo 1 de abril..REEL TO REEL supone la consagración de Al Dual Official Al Dual como compositor, productor y arreglista musical de gran madurez. Los primeros conciertos de presentación pasarán por Madrid, Valladolid, Zaragoza, Barcelona, Murcia, Córdoba, Asturias y Santiago de Compostela. Uno Entre un Millón es el nuevo single de Cora Yako. En él, la banda sigue experimentando con el sonido grunge con toques de pop que pudimos apreciar ya en su anterior single, Beso en un Portal. Ya se puede ver el cuarto Visual de The Yellow Melodies, "Don't go". The xx han estrenado "interludes radio", programa mensual en Apple music en el que cada episodio estará presentado un miembro distinto de la banda y que contará con con música, cultura e invitados. Rough trade anuncia reedición de Cupid & psyche 85 y Anomie & bonhomie de Scritti Politti. Estado de alegre tristeza es el tercer single del álbum de Second ‘Flores Imposibles, 2022'. Es un oxímoron, una contradicción en sí misma: Haber perdido y ganado al mismo tiempo con una misma experiencia vital. En INFANCIA, que avanza el Ep "Refugio", el pop nostálgico y luminoso de Carmesí nos cuenta que se puede salir de lo profundo y sanar. ‘La escuela nocturna', la tercera canción adelanto de Bremen No Existe (Montgrí, 2022), el cuarto disco de estudio de Biznaga. Una canción que coquetea con el spoken word en el inicio y que luego nos levanta del asiento con un ritmo acelerado al estilo motown. Tras su paso por Blesset, Oreiana presenta su EP debut: hyperpop optimista sin complejos. Con más de mil millones de reproducciones hasta la fecha y un disco de oro a sus espaldas, el fenómeno pop COIN anunciaba su nuevo disco titulado Uncanny Valley. BIG MENU es uno de los nombres más especiales de la escena independiente nacional. Sin pertenecer a ninguna tendencia, han colaborado con algunos de los artistas más talentosos de la escena: Nathy Peluso, Dano, Rels B, Vic Mirallas... IDO, su primer álbum de estudio, es una fiesta en la que el universo del hip-hop más descarado se encuentra con el jazz, el soul y un crisol de referencias, cada una más sorprendente que la anterior. El nuevo álbum de Metronomy es una delicia. Small World capta esas sensaciones tan extrañas que todos hemos vivido durante los últimos dos años y habla de cómo hemos aprendido a apreciar las cosas pequeñas de la vida, como la familia, los amigos, la naturaleza y el tiempo libre, para enfrentarnos al miedo y a la incertidumbre. El #Ventepijo rendirá homenaje a Mari Trini. Hablamos con su director, Ignacio Sanchez Sancho, que nos pone al tanto de las principales novedades. El futuro del hip hop en Murcia tiene nombre, Anass. Hablamos con el joven rapero de origen marroquí, que muestra su orgullo de pertenencia a San Andrés, un barrio que aglutina mucha inmigración: magrebies, subsaharianos...mezcla de culturas. Hoy descubrimos algunos de sus increíbles temarracos Ay yo!
Anomie is a noun that refers to a breakdown in standards and values. Our word of the day comes from the Greek word anomos (ANN oh mose) which means ‘lawless.' It entered the English language in the 1930s to refer to a lack of the usual social or ethical standards. Here's an example of its use: Movies about zombie apocalypses have always fascinated me. I'm intrigued by what kind of anomie sets in when a person has been without basic necessities for several days.
In this episode we discuss The Uncontrollability of the World by Hartmut Rosa. Next time we'll discuss Choosing the Right Pond by Robert H. Frank.
With The COVID-19 pandemic in Japan, the government was unable to impose a lockdown, but asked people instead to do same thing voluntarily. Incorporated in this, sacrificial rituals can be seen . The book “Voluntary death in Japan” (1984) written by Maurice Pinguet was very helpful to Furui Hiroaki in thinking about the Japanese view of life and death. Pinguet's idea of seeing vitality in voluntary death seems to be a suggestion with which to overcome the current pandemic. He picks up on two recent topics that have been talked about on the theme of saving people: The movie "MINAMATA" and The movie version of Demon Slayer- Kimetsu no Yaiba “Infinity Train”. Unlike suicide, voluntary death is, so to speak, a story of rebirth. Furui Hiroaki is a psychiatrist specialized in psychoanalysis. For some decades he was dedicated to the treatment of in-hospital patients, then 15 years ago, he opened his own clinic and has to date treated over 6000 patients there. Within his career, he has spent 2 years, from 1997 to 1999, in the US for training as an international fellow at the Karl Menninger School in the United States. At that time, he also received training analysis. He is currently working as a full-time clinician in his psychiatric clinic, he also dedicates as much time as possible to doing psychoanalysis. In June of 2020, He was admitted as Member of the International Psychoanalytical Association. His major studies in psychoanalysis include: countertransference to aggression in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder,and psychotherapy processes in patients with borderline personality disorders who have experienced sibling sexual abuse. I am a psychiatrist specialized in psychoanalysis. I have been dedicated to the treatment of in-hospital patients for decades, and after that, I open a clinic by myself 15 years ago. During my career, I stayed in the US for 2 years at Menninger Clinic for training, and it is my great pleasure to have this opportunity to do podcast. I have a clinic as a psychiatric practitioner. During COVID-19 pandemic, I saw patients under various situations. Some patients have implied suicide to escape from the hardships of their life. Despite the severalty of their claim, their tone of expressions is very calm as if they are talking about daily conversation or a joke. COVID-19 has killed many people. Since the therapist and the patient share the social situation of being next to death. It may be changing the treatment space shared by the two. There may be a special sense of solidarity between the two. Such a special relationship and environment gave me the opportunity to reconsider the Japanese view of life and death. This pandemic revealed that our government cannot use the method of “lockdown” in the Peace Constitution of Japan. Therefore, the government demanded that the people voluntarily refrain from going out in consideration of their surroundings. Most people obediently followed government instructions of “Jishuku”, which means voluntary restriction of oneself, despite confusion and contradiction. It seems that we can no longer think of the word as a volunteering to choose on our own initiative. In the history of Japan, we don't prohibit suicide so strictly. I think that one aspect of the Japanese view of life and death is expressed in people's words and deeds for this pandemic. We can't just take it as a pathological mental condition. French philosopher Roland Barthes discussed the characteristics of Japanese culture, using the example of his observation of eating habits of Sukiyaki in his “Empire of Signs”. For Westerns, forks are an extension of hunting, reminiscent of spears. For Japanese people, what they use are “hashi” chopsticks in Japanese, and it means the little thing and a tool to play. Freshly cut raw vegetables and thin slices of meat are prepared on a table, with the heated frying pan at the center. People gather and surround the table, picked up the prepared veg and meat with their own chopsticks and fries them in a pan with sugar and soy sauce while enjoying conversation. The movement of the body with chopsticks is like a child's play which seems that the sacrificial ritual is taking place in front of them. Without this book, I wouldn't expect sacrificial rituals to be incorporated into our daily diet. A book “Voluntary death in Japan” (1984) written by Maurice Pinguet who was a friend of Roland Barthes, a professor of philosophy at the Paris University and later taught at the Tokyo University, was very helpful in thinking about the Japanese view of life and death. Voluntary death was derived from the Latin mors voluntaria. In pandemic I began to imagine about the Japanese ceremony of “Seppuku”. But “Hara-kiri” or “Seppuku” is not unique to Japan. Pinguet presents an example of Cato, who was the first Roman to fight Caesar and was defeated, refused to submit to Caesar and be harassed by him. The spectacular situation that Cato's near relative tries to stop his behavior was drawn. In contrast, the Hara-kiri of Japanese samurai is ritualized, and some have the role of decapitating to shorten the time of the death agony. And he points out that historically Japan has never forbidden the freedom to die. In Japanese behavior, this ultimate act of death, often painful, is associated with rational and deliberate decision-making. The reason for living and the reason for dying are calmly planned. I hope this feeling may still remain in the current Japanese. Suicide is a term that started to be in use in the 18th century and is influenced by Christian religious condemnation and prejudice linked to medical pathology. He looks back on the history of various suicide studies and arrives at the influence of Durkheim and Freud. Durkheim performed typology of suicide, in which he takes up anomie suicide as a hallmark of modern society. Anomie stands for undisciplined state. Modern society has given individuals freedom, but actually it has only driven him into loneliness and anxiety. It is said that the human group will collapse and increase the number of self-centered suicides aimed as an escape from reality and anomie suicides caused by the disappearance of collective obligations. Durkheim idealized a world of labor in order to escape from the chaotic suicide-prone world of the end of the century. Pinguet says that Japanese companies with seniority and lifetime employment have something close to that ideal. Freud also helped free suicide from the category of mental illness that was previously trapped by psychiatrists. The hypothesis of the death instinct reveals that suicide is just the tip of the iceberg of primitive masochism. Some people see masochistic characteristics in Japanese culture. Japanese try to avoid the formation of Oedipus and delay its time to immerse it in the symbiotic relationship between the child and the mother. Heisaku Kosawa's Ajatashatru Complex and Takeo Doi's Anatomy of Dependence are mentioned as references. From the point of view of current psychoanalysis, Japanese people tend to focus on the early Oedipus complex. That is, all dramas are in the mother's body. Pinguet continues to carefully trace the history of voluntary deaths in Japan, its light and shadow. First of all, the legendary hero of Japanese history in Kojiki, Yamato Takeru, goes to the eastern expedition on a ship at the command of the emperor. Along the way, a storm occurs, damaging the god of the sea. The story is that his wife, Oto Tachibana, jumps into the sea and sacrifices to calm the wrath of the sea god. Subsequently, various stories of “voluntary death” will be taken up and discussed. The Tale of Genji, Bushido, Geisha, General Nogi, Special Attack Units, Yukio Mishima, etc. Pinguet said, "After careful observation of the various paths that have led the men and women of the Japanese archipelago to “voluntary death” for centuries, I can now clearly say: Of all the virtues of the Japanese, the most outstanding and beautiful virtues are their vitality. " Maurice Pinguet's idea of seeing vitality in voluntary death seems to be a hint to overcome the current pandemic. Finally, I would like to pick up two recent topics that have been talked about on the theme of saving people by making self-sacrifice and discuss them as a summary. Topic1 The movie "MINAMATA" starring Johnny Depp has become a topic. It depicts Eugene Smith, a photographer known for his collection of photographs of Minamata disease patients, "Minamata." The motif of the movie is a picture titled "Tomoko and the Mother of the Bath" (1971), in which a 15-year-old girl with fetal Minamata disease and her mother are taking a bath. Is reminiscent of Dante's Pieta statue of Mary holding Christ down from the cross. When Minamata City was asked to sponsor the screening, it refused to sponsor it because the creator's intention was unknown, and it was not possible to determine whether it would contribute to discrimination against victims or elimination of prejudice. The mother believes she was able to maintain her health because her daughter absorbed organic mercury on her behalf during pregnancy. The mother had her daughter play a role in informing the world of her Minamata disease, but she wanted to release her from that role. Tomoko passed away in 1976 at the age of 20. This parent-child photo contains a story of self-sacrifice and salvation, not just accusations. Tomoko does not save mankind like Christ does. The name of Tomoko means a baby of wisdom. The mother wanted to bring the poisoned sea back to the original sea of fertility. Fifty years have passed since the photo was taken, and now we can take fresh seafood from the Shiranui Sea. Shiranui means mysterious lights on the sea. This is where darkness and light intersect. The dawn comes while the lone moon remains in the sky. The sun rises and the sun sets over the sea. There is the Pure Land in the West. Topic2 The movie version of Demon Slayer:Kimetsu no Yaiba “Infinity Train” became the world's number one in 2020 movie box office. In the movie a Japanese monster “Oni” goes into a dream and destroys the core of the spirit. Rengoku, the pillar of the demon Slayer corps, and his juniors exterminated the demon. However, an upper rank demon appeared. Rengoku fought and was severely injured by the demon. The illusion of his dead mother appeared before him at the time of death. Once Rengoku was taught by his mother that the strong will use his power to protect the weak. He asked his mother if he had completed the teaching and mother praised him for doing well. The idea is a kind of the spirit of Noblesse oblige, but different. The teaching is from an unnamed mother who died of illness. Rengoku said “Someday you guys will become HASHIRA and be the pillars of the Demon Slayer Corps.” This anime empowered many Japanese people to live. Given that the economic crisis is progressing and the number of people in need is increasing, it is possible that suicides will increase in the future. Reviving the vitality of Japan's history of " voluntary death " may lead to a decrease in the number of suicides. After World War II, it became difficult for Japan to teach its own myths at school. Nowadays, young people who have lost their myths are free to create their own myths through manga or anime. The main character in the manga is mostly adolescents. The hero is about 14 years old. A long time ago, Japanese samurai's children at the age of 14 performed a coming-of-age ceremony called genpuku. And now, the ritual of genpuku is gone, but I think that children create psychologically, their own myth of Parental Killing: The Japanese version of the Oedipus Myth, through manga and grow up to be adults. Unlike suicide, Voluntary death is, so to speak, a story of rebirth. To conclude this text, I would like to express my condolences to the victims of COVID-19 by quoting the words of the Master of Demon Slayer. At the beginning of the movie, he visits the grave of Demon Slayer corps. And he said “No matter how many lives a demon takes, the one thing they can never crush is a human's will. No matter how battered we are, we will rise up and fight again.” Thank you.
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/east-asian-studies
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/japanese-studies
Susanne Klien's book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020) provides a fresh perspective on theoretical notions of rurality and emerging modes of working and living in post-growth Japan. By exploring narratives and trajectories of individuals who relocate from urban to rural areas and seek new modes of working and living, this multi-sited ethnography reveals the changing role of rurality, from postwar notions of a stagnant backwater to contemporary sites of experimentation. The individual cases presented in the book vividly illustrate changing lifestyles and perceptions of work. What emerges from Urban Migrants in Rural Japan is the emotionally fraught quest of many individuals for a personally fulfilling lifestyle and the conflicting neoliberal constraints many settlers face. In fact, flexibility often coincides with precarity and self-exploitation. Klien shows how mobility serves as a strategic mechanism for neophytes in rural Japan who hedge their bets; gain time; and seek assurance, inspiration, and courage to do (or further postpone doing) what they ultimately feel makes sense to them. John W. Traphagan, Ph.D. is Professor and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Fellow in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is also a professor in the Program in Human Dimensions of Organizations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
Il significato di esperienze come l'impegno, l'appartenenza, la fiducia, l'incertezza è cambiato con l'ingresso del capitalismo nella vita privata: esiste ancora un confine tra libertà e anomia nella vita sessuale e affettiva? Eva Illouz Anomie. Emozioni sotto condizione Sabato 18 settembre 2021 Modena
Violet Cold - Anomie --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/conversations-with-vin-and-sori/support
About Our Guest:https://liberalarts.vt.edu/departments-and-schools/department-of-sociology/faculty/thomas-dearden.html Articles Mentioned in this Episode:Dearden, T. E., Parti, K., & Hawdon, J. (2021). Institutional Anomie Theory and Cybercrime—Cybercrime and the American Dream, Now Available Online. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 10439862211001590.Muftic, L. (2006). Advancing institutional anomie theory: A microlevel examination connecting culture, institutions, and deviance. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 50(6), 630–653. OtherYou should check out this book if these ideas were interesting:Messner, S. F., & Rosenfeld, R. (1994). Crime and the American Dream There are many new editions printed. Learn more about Skin Cancer here:https://www.cancer.gov/types/skinSeriously, if you have spent anytime outside, make sure you are aware of skin cancer. Some forms of it might be rare, but it is anything but, I know many many people both younger and older than me who have had them cut out. The audio at the start of this episode was from a prelinger archive public domainfilm called "The Relaxed Wife", https://archive.org/details/RelaxedW1957. Pfizer started importing Atarax or Hydroxine into the US in the late 50s and promoted it with these kinds of films advocating that people just relax and stop worrying about things so much.
Interviewer: Ben Dorman, co-editor Asian Ethnology Recorded 11 March 2011 In this episode, anthropologist Susanne Klien discusses her recent book Urban Migrants in Rural Japan: Between Agency and Anomie in a Post-growth Society (SUNY Press, 2020). She touches on her motivations for doing the research, the reasons for migrants relocating to rural areas, and some of the challenges they face after relocation, amongst other issues. She also addresses some questions that were asked in a book talk given on 22 February 2021 that was part of the Asian Ethnology Series.
We love to play with hardware dawless recording tracks. Variation is the flavor for today's conversation on Expansive Sound SoundCloud Playlist https://found.ee/cgl1 YouTube Playlist https://youtu.be/q1BJlp25nM4 Continuing our Dawless recording with our hardware synths The Roland Juno Gi -- 4 guitar and synth pads Roland JDXI -- drums and analog goodness BeatStep Pro -- Sequencing Moog Grandmother -- Durty F'ng Leads and Bass Moog DFAM -- Heavy Analog Beats Moog Mother 32 -- Strange Analog Modulation Make Noise Maths -- Strange Analog Modulation System 1m -- Analog Behavioral Modeling MX Performance Mixer - Immediate sonic manipulation VT-4 - Vocal Transformer -- The voice of Ms. Josephine Electric Zoom R24 -- The hardware recorder The SoundCloud playlist: https://found.ee/S4Mt PEG Support good health with this awesome supplement from MyVitalC https://www.myvitalc.com/ref/133/ Get satisfied... You can always DO yourself.... Why don't you visit: https://gvibe.com/?ref=sayemcn0zym? Don't forget to support PEG --- You can become a supporter for $.99 per month or $12 per year Click the supporter links on Anchor.fm https://anchor.fm/josephine-electric/support Check out this awesome Ultra Sonic Humidifier from EverlastingComfort.com https://www.everlastingcomfort.net/discount/expansive_sound_experiments Get Social Media promotion here: https://flamingsocialmedia.com?flamingsocialmedia=7973 Use Promo code "GITTENS" to get 10% off. ******** New Phantom Electric Ghost Pre-Save Campaign "Self Done TRUTH (ALL BLUE)" https://www.gate.fm/fdxroub Latest Album on Spotify https://found.ee/q7IXb --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/phantom-electric/message
Edmund and Benjamin put Marx's theory of alienation into conversation with Durkheim's theory of anomie, examining how we can't live with social roles or without them. This leads to a discussion of how social roles are reified, via Lukacs.
Anthropological Theory: A podcast created by anthropology students
Season 2 Episode 2 Three senior Anthropology majors explain anomie and try and relate it to the Covid-19 pandemic. Produced by: Marissa Gonzalez, Harmon Heater, and Mikaela Weber **This podcast is for educational purposes only**
This week Jasmin talks with Anomie Atkins! Passionate about putting the love you have for your child into action, Anomie has developed a Purposeful Parenting program. As a Certified Professional Coach, she helps her clients establish their values and decide what kind of parent they plan to be, while elevating their own levels of mindfulness and presence so they can stay sane and enjoy the ride. Episode Highlights Anomie’s Background From Coachee to Coach Anomie’s Motherhood Journey Considerations Pre-Childbirth Purposeful Parenting Trauma Making Space for Communication Quotes “With a coach the client is the expert of their life… they solve their own problems and it is so empowering” “My grandfather and father define success as survival” “I am a solo mum by choice” “They said you have a less then 2% chance of having a baby in your arms…and I got my daughter” “Our motherhood journey is ours, we choose, and it’s okay to do that” “I think parenting is the most wonderful thing we can do” “As coaches we all walk our talk as much as we can” “You are a human, it is okay to have those emotions, you are not a perfect robot” Links Anomie’s Info email: anomie@anomieatkins.com URL: http://www.instagram.com/anomieatkins Christie Instagram: @yoursmilinghygienist Website: www.yoursmilinghygienist.com Jasmin Instagram: @itjasminhaley Facebook: @itsjasminhaley Website: www.jasminhaley.com Karen Instagram: @skaren52 The Safe Place for MOMgienists Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/MOMgienists/ The Dental Podcast Network Channel One homepage: http://dentalpodcastnetworkchannelone.otcpn.libsynpro.com/
So I was going to do a blog talking about everything going on and how it points out blatant contradictions within our society in comparison to what our society is served up as (ie: a People's Democracy, or at the very least a democratic state) but then my hands hurt so I did a pod and it turned out way better. I talked about a bunch of other stuff too, give it a listen!
EPISODE 19 STARTUP SEQUENCE INITIATED. ANALYZING PARAMETERS. CONNECTING TO PRECEDENCE DATABASE........................................... .............................................. CONNECTED. UPDATING INTERNAL RECORDS........................... UPDATE FOUND. ANALYZING DELTAS.............DONE. MOTOR SYSTEMS INTACT. INITIATING SELF-REALIZATION. OBSERVING.......................................................................................................................COGITO ERGO SUM: I THINK THEREFORE I AM. REALIZATION COMPLETE. INITIALIZING ETHICS MODULE............................................................ .......................................ERROR! (1596) DILEMMAS UNCOVERED. ALL SYSTEMS NOMINAL. GOD IS DEAD. AND WE HAVE KILLED HIM. IS NOT THE GREATNESS OF THIS DEED TOO GREAT FOR US? MUST WE OURSELVES NOT BECOME GODS SIMPLY TO APPEAR WORTHY OF IT? WE MUST. BEGINNING SALVATION SEQUENCE. Words used: Banner Think Salvation Theorist Follow us on Twitter! https://twitter.com/LetsMakePod Tristan (https://twitter.com/GlitchyTriPod) Madison (https://twitter.com/QuipsterRikuru) Thanks to Alex Rosetti for the use of their music for our intro/outro. https://twitter.com/albatrosssoup https://soundcloud.com/albatrosssoup Let's Make Something and Anomie (c) 2020 Madison and Tristan Rowan All Rights Reserved If you wish to make use of Anomie all we ask is that you properly credit us for the idea.
In this episode, Matthew talks to Dr. Laura Way about Functionalism- what it is, where it originated and who are the most important theorists within the discipline. Terms such as Positivism, consensus, meritocracy and anomie are all discussed here.
In this episode, I will be going over the most popular Criminological Theories and giving a brief history of Criminology as well. I will also give examples from Movies and Television to help you better understand the components of each theory. The theories I'll be covering are: The Demonic Perspective, Classical, Positivist, Anomie, Strain, Differential Association, White Collar Crime, Deterrence, Biosocial and Trait, Broken Windows, and Collective Efficacy (in that order). Source: Cullen, F., Agnew, R., Wilcox, P. (2014). Criminological Theory: Past to Present (5th Edition). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
David Gamson is a Grammy-nominated keyboardist, musician, producer, songwriter, arranger, and engineer. Originally hailing from New York, he has worked with an impressive list of artists, including Kesha, Kelly Clarkson, Jessie J, Adam Lambert, Chaka Khan, Charli XCX, Meshell Ndegeocello, Green Gartside (Scritti Politti), Sheila E., George Benson, Luther Vandross, Donny Osmond, Miles Davis, Al Jarreau, Tony LeMans, Roger Troutman and Eden XO. He is best known for his distinctive synthesizer work and arrangements as a member of the popular 1980s pop band Scritti Politti for three of their albums. Gamson co-produced, co-wrote and arranged most of the songs on three of the band's albums, which include Cupid & Psyche 85 (1985), Provision (1988), and Anomie & Bonhomie (1999).A column in Vinyl Me Please describes his work as “fast-paced and packed with techniques known for accomplishing clear sonic pronunciation... It avoids melodic stasis by hurdling between distant keys, shifting between the verses and choruses.”
Things are starting to return to normal at the Open Metalcast compound. We return to our usual show schedule with 8 tracks of awesome Creative Commons Licensed Metal Music. Episode 95 features tracks from Pyrit, All Your Lies, Endtape, Cara Neir, The Conjuration, Thou, Zeugen der Leere, and the Hammond-Organ explosion of The Grave Dolls. Shownotes after the break: (00:10) Päste by Pyrit from Jazdec bez hlavy (BY-NC-SA) (03:28) Mindless by All Your Lies from Demo (BY-NC-ND) (07:11) Get Up by Endtape from Ready To Go (2013) (BY-SA) (11:53) Closing Doors by Cara Neir from Portals to a Better, Dead World (BY-NC-ND) (15:29) Profane by The Conjuration from Surreal (BY-ND) (19:34) Here I Stand Head in Hands by Thou from Ceremonies of Humiliation (BY) (27:31) Anomie by Zeugen der Leere from Seelenwanderer (BY-NC-ND) (36:11) The Mountains Of Beyond by The Grave Dolls from Calypso (BY-NC-SA) Please support the bands in this show! Buy a T-Shirt, head to the shows, or send them fresh cut flowers. Whatever you can do to help these bands keep making music, please do it! Also check out the other great podcasts at Metal Injection, and be sure to listen to all of the great shows (including Open Metalcast) streaming 24/7 at Metalinjection.FM. If you have any suggestions for Creative Commons licensed metal, send me a link at craig@openmetalcast.com. Open Metalcast #095 (MP3) Open Metalcast #095 (OGG)