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Sutanovac

Unlearning Language that Controls the Mind

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-1-032-49360-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Erscheinungstermin: 14.10.2025
vorbestellbar, Erscheinungstermin ca. Oktober 2025

Originally an edited collection, ULCM is to be read as a continuous multi-voiced work on what takes place when we forget that unlearning is a part of our existence as much as learning. As the world as we know it finds itself at a critical juncture yet again, how we talk about the continuously amassing genocidal invasions and authoritarian occupations of our minds, thoughts, bodies and environments will affect how we experience, process and counter them on a day to day basis. Based on this, ULCM offers its readers a singular interdisciplinary blueprint of the inner and outer workings of motivated language use when in service of mind engineering and engineered acting. As such, it is a valuable enabling resource for anyone looking to identify and unlearn the languages that mask belief traps and cognitive distortions set up by various anti-social actors to keep our day to day cognition and acting confined to society as engineered laboratory. With its interdisciplinary breadth and engaging multimodal content, this handbook breaks new grounds in actionable application of science as accessible community-enabling tool for seeing through, i.e. dismantling belief traps and mental distortions that turn language use into mindbody abuse.


Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9781032493602
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-1-032-49360-2
  • Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Erscheinungstermin: 14.10.2025
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: 1. Auflage 2025
  • Produktform: Gebunden
  • Seiten: 296
  • Format (B x H): 156 x 234 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt
Autoren/Hrsg.

Herausgeber

1. Analyzing the processes and Consequence of the Russian Encroachment of Body, Mind, and Soul in Fiction (Zainab Faiz)
2. From Language to Psychology and Back Again: The role of language and emotions in political and psychological mind engineering – Decolonising the indigenous mind? (Daria Schwalbe)
3. Manufacturing consent through linguistic interpellation one “spin” at a time: exploring the dialogic architectonics of a mind as a “spin room” (Vlad Shu)
4. Engineering adaptive conspiracies: online cults and the case of QAnon (Rita Gsenger)
5. The Green Spectacle: On the Relationship Between Capitalism and Nature (Vincenzo Maria Di Mino)
6. Clarks' Doll Experiment Revisited: Omnipresent Ideology and the Two Paths of Pressurization (Jonathan Brownlee)
7. Bastions against “Rehabilitation” and Sanctuaries for Memory: Analyzing the Power of Prison Diaries from Kenya, China, and Argentina (Vivienne Tailor)
8. The Rhetoric of Fear and Safetyism and how this rhetoric acts on subjects and calls into being authoritative power structures (David Stubblefield)
9. Advertising Activism: Exploring Advertisements of Cultural Productions of West Bengal during Bangladesh Liberation War 1971 (Tiyasha Sengupta)

10. Taiwanese and Chinese: Ethnic disparity created by political ideologies (Chris Shei)
11. The economic mind psychological and biological bases: A cognitive-complex approach (Daniela Cialfi)