In Against Meritocracy: Culture, Power and Myths of Mobility, Jo Littler offers a rich analysis that intricately teases out the grasp ‘merit’ and ‘meritocracy’ have on everyday cultural and social narratives of value and power in contemporary society. This is a rewarding contribution to the shared work of challenging hegemonic, neoliberal myths that uphold the status quo, recommends Sarah Burton, and to the building of a better and fairer world
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In Against Meritocracy: Culture, Power and Myths of Mobility, Jo Littler offers a rich analysis that...
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Brexit is as big and dangerous a mistake as that of appeasement in the 1930s. So argues Cato the You...
In this paper I elucidate various ways in which understanding can be seen as an excellence of the mi...
In The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media, Jeremy Weissman explores the...
In Against Meritocracy: Culture, Power and Myths of Mobility, Jo Littler offers a rich analysis that...
In The Pound and the Fury: Why Anger and Confusion Reign in an Economy Paralysed by Myth, Jack Mosse...
In Complaint!, Sara Ahmed follows the institutional life of complaints within the university, explor...
In Making Milk: The Past, Present and Future of Our Primary Food, editors Mathilde Cohen and Yoriko ...
In Cameron: The Politics of Modernisation and Manipulation, Timothy Heppell offers a new analysis of...
The author of this book, Thomas Maschio, has lived two anthropological lives; an earlier one as an a...
This article is the foreword to Dr Paul Harpur's 'Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Law Openin...
In this paper I propose to examine the Snowden affair as a cultural and communicative phenomenon, lo...
This essay argues that there are theoretical benefits to keeping distinct—more pervasively than the ...
Sarah Leavitt is an artist, cartoonist and writer, and a member of the Creative Writing Department a...
In Nervous States: How Feeling Took Over the World, William Davies examines how feeling has come to ...
In Capital and Ideology, Thomas Piketty proposes a vision for a fairer economic system grounded in ‘...
Brexit is as big and dangerous a mistake as that of appeasement in the 1930s. So argues Cato the You...
In this paper I elucidate various ways in which understanding can be seen as an excellence of the mi...
In The Crowdsourced Panopticon: Conformity and Control on Social Media, Jeremy Weissman explores the...