Lifestyle Gurus. Chris Rojek
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Название: Lifestyle Gurus

Автор: Chris Rojek

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Кинематограф, театр

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isbn: 9781509530205

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СКАЧАТЬ Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, was able to inspire levels of mass passion and certitude that some felt were absent in the West. This reaction among Westerners suggested two things. Firstly, wherever its hand had touched, the Enlightenment revolution of Reason had produced a bloodless quality in everyday life. As Weber (1905) argued, it has let predictability, routine, regimentation and standardisation out of the traps and contributed to feelings of disenchantment. Judged on an emotional level, the tolerance, mutuality and respect generated by the Enlightenment were no match for the passion and exultation produced by magic, myth and religion. Second, disquiet with the bloodless character of political life in the West provoked the insight that the Enlightenment may have been over-confident in holding that Science and Reason must necessarily diminish magic, myth and religion.

      This should not be a surprise. From the very beginning, de-traditionalisation inevitably precipitated a counter-reaction. Science and technology saw no place for traditional philosophical and religious questions having to do with the meaning, purpose and the mystery of existence. The Enlightenment assumed that these questions would gradually wither and die to be universally replaced by the secular, verifiable benefits of Reason. This has not turned out to be the path that history actually followed. Despite being dismissed by strict Enlightenment values, religious belief, and various forms of myth and magic, survive. Collective emotion, thought and identity continue to be organised around the sacred and profane. This was an outcome observed by Émile Durkheim (1912) in his analysis of the religious dimensions that bind social life. The sacred is not confined to religion or tradition. It refers to the idealisation of group beliefs as manifest in the social movements, scandals and political events that characterise modern life. The non-rational factors driving these events highlight that belief in the sacred persists, contemporary social life continues to be infused with symbolic meaning, morality, affective ‘ritual-like’ practices and storytelling (Alexander et al. 2006; Baker 2014; Alexander 2017). These characteristics, together with the revolt against scientific expertise, are hallmarks of lifestyle guru sites.

      The source of this demystification is not only the inability of experts to calculate and control risk, but the failure of key institutions of modernity (e.g. science, business and politics) to take responsibility for them. History reveals multiple examples of corporations and governments acting unethically, succumbing to corruption and commercial interests. The Beech-Nut Fake Apple Juice Scandal in the US (1979), the emergence of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (‘Mad Cow Disease’) scandal in Britain (1980s), the Melamine Milk Scandal in China (2008), and the Horsemeat Scandal in Europe (2013) are just a few of the scandals that have eroded trust in science and caused public disquiet (Baker and Rojek 2019). Public distrust of food corporations is particularly high in the US, where lobbyists exercise the power to influence government policies. In Risk Society (1992), Beck cites government oversight during the Chernobyl and Bhopal disasters as noteworthy incidents that lowered public trust of politicians, science and technology. Scandals involving pharmaceutical companies buying the opinions of doctors and scientists to endorse particular drugs further erodes trust relations between professionals and the public (Goldacre 2012). In these circumstances, experts themselves are condemned as a risk and hazard to well-being (Beck 2006: 336). The result is growing public scepticism of professionals that undermines the legitimacy of the institutions they represent, often referred to as ‘Big Business’, ‘Big Food’ and ‘Big Pharma’. It manifests in general feelings of distrust towards experts and elites, providing a space for alternative religious and secular voices to claim authority in opposition to received fiat. This attitude was forcefully expressed during the 2016 United States presidential election and United Kingdom European Union membership referendum in 2016 when both the Republican candidate, Donald Trump and Michael Gove, the former British Justice Secretary, attacked the sanctity of expert knowledge and practice. Late modern life, then, is characterised by a distinct set of attitudes towards professional expertise. On the one hand, we rely more on experts to help ameliorate the complexities and uncertainties of modern life; on the other, distrust of authority and expertise is part of the scepticism that characterises ‘reflexive modernity’.