From an epistemological and social perspective, prejudice might be understood as an expression of individual identity as well as social and collective identity. Indeed, prejudice might be equivalent to the judgment that forms those identities because it is a product of the previous personal and collective history. A synchronic and diachronic analysis of prejudice allows us to understand the difference between the “prejudices of now” (Jetzeit) and those rooted in culture.
The Recognition of Self through the History of Individual and Social Identities
LENZI F.R.
2018-01-01
Abstract
From an epistemological and social perspective, prejudice might be understood as an expression of individual identity as well as social and collective identity. Indeed, prejudice might be equivalent to the judgment that forms those identities because it is a product of the previous personal and collective history. A synchronic and diachronic analysis of prejudice allows us to understand the difference between the “prejudices of now” (Jetzeit) and those rooted in culture.File in questo prodotto:
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