ABSTRACT

Borrowing terminology from the economic discipline‘specifically the concept of "capital" has led to an abundance of new terms in the social sciences: human capital, social capital, and cultural capital, to name the most prominent representatives on an ever-growing list. In this interdisciplinary transaction, the concept is borrowed and the original meaning extended until the new concepts often have nothing left in common with their initial referents.Here Jacek Tittenbrun offers a critical analysis of human, social, and cultural capital on the basis of their uses and misuses across a wide range of social sciences, simultaneously revealing the source of conceptual diffusion in the real world. He presents a two-pronged analysis of an intellectual fashion popular in the social sciences and offers a critical analysis of a range of concepts constructed around the common core of "capital." The analysis is innovative, as it is underpinned by a theoretical framework rooted in economic sociology and the concept of ownership in particular. The approach is one of the sociology of knowledge coupled with a substantive critique-application of the given concepts.The volume reveals a range of processes in the real world that account for the conceptual diffusion. The general reader will be drawn to the discussion in the second half of the book, a study of a variety of relatable real life situations that illuminate privatization and commodification in our lives.

chapter 1|4 pages

Ownership

chapter 2|38 pages

Human Capital and Its Pioneering Labors

chapter 3|54 pages

Social Capital

chapter 6|10 pages

Economists on Human and Social Capital

chapter 7|4 pages

Economic Imperialism

chapter 12|10 pages

The Privatization of Public Space

chapter 14|2 pages

The Commodification of Culture

chapter 17|4 pages

The Commodification of Third-World Poverty

chapter 18|2 pages

The Commodification of Morality

chapter 19|6 pages

The Commodification of Emotions

chapter 20|2 pages

The Commodification of Death

chapter 21|6 pages

The Commodification of the Human Body

chapter 22|6 pages

The Commodification of Health Care

chapter 23|2 pages

The Commodification of Sports

chapter 24|2 pages

The Commodification of Capital

chapter 25|2 pages

The Privatization of the Cosmos

chapter 26|8 pages

Economy and Society

chapter 27|8 pages

Memetics