Mozda ce ovo dati par uvida:
http://www.amazon.com/Perpetua...lence-Rethinking/dp/0944624421
The Perpetual Consequences of Fear and Violence: Rethinking the Future
Pt. I. The grip of fear --
Ch. 1. How fear rules humanity --
Pt. II. How fear guides our thinking --
Ch. 2. When fear infiltrated culture --
Pt. III. Perpetuating fear and violence --
Ch. 3. In the name of justice --
Ch. 4. Fear's classroom --
Ch. 5. One species' war against itself --
Ch. 6. The tyranny of small decisions --
Ch. 7. The corporate bid to own the world --
Ch. 8. Demanding patents on life --
Ch. 9. Ask the children.
^ poglavlja, moze se naslutiti zasto strah.
Nazalost jos uvek nisam nasao PDF izdanje...
Evo i malo zanimljivijeg clanka, od strane psihologa:
Citat:
Dexter is a Showtime series about a serial killer with a code. He only kills the bad guys who deserve it. We love Dexter precisely because he finds bad guys and kills them before they can hurt us. In a world plagued by terrorism, lost jobs, shrinking retirement accounts, political scapegoating, outsourcing, and freeway shootings, it’s nice to have a guy around with strict code of honor who doesn’t mind getting his hands a little dirty to restore order.
....
Hindering this drive toward cognitive consonance is the fact that humans are hard-wired to notice things that are dangerous. Out in the wilds, noticing the lion was much more important for our survival than the noticing the tree. Right down to our eyeballs, we are made to detect movement. If things are stationary, they can’t hurt us. If things change abruptly (or run and jump), we have to watch out. And we do. All the time.
This hasn’t gone unnoticed by the mass media, marketers, or politicians. Fear messaging gets our attention. We’ve been on orange alert ever since 9/11. In the absence of real emergencies, there is no shortage of topics to escalate to a fever pitch and blame when necessary: crime, drugs, outsourcing, video games, television, illegal immigrants, China, Iran, North Korea, Internet, corporate conglomerates, and Wall Street.
The trouble is, that leaves us in a permanent state of craving for someone to blame and someone like Dexter who promises to restore order by making them pay.
Nobel prize winner Eric Kandel repeatedly shocked sea slug neurons and learned that nerve cells never fully recover from repeated assault. As a society, we are suffering from a kind of post-traumatic generalized anxiety disorder, a by-product of a decade of rapid change, economic difficulties, and relentless fear tactics. We are all convinced that there is danger at every turn.
Dexter may be addicted to killing, but we have our own addiction for order. We’re in a permanent state of fear arousal about the state of the world, vibrating away like Kandel’s sea slug. We want order and we want it badly. So badly, in fact, that we are willing to be a morally flexible and embrace Dexter’s methods of achieving it. In real life, moral flexibility is a slippery slope. History is replete with examples right here in the US of abusing people’s rights under the guise of restoring a sense of order in society. Dexter is just a TV show, a fictional narrative, albeit at the more violent end of the vigilante continuum. We might, however, want to take note of the overall themes of popular programming. They are a good barometer of our social anxiety and vulnerabilities. It is not a big leap to get from Dexter’s code to things like McCarthyism or Guantanamo, all in the name of good.
http://www.psychologytoday.com...plastic-sheeting-and-alls-righ
[Ovu poruku je menjao Igor Gajic dana 06.05.2010. u 00:05 GMT+1]