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Orange is the new black and philosophy

Greene, Richard(Edited by)Robison-Greene, Rachel(Edited by)
Part of the Popular Culture and Philosophy series
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This collection of eighteen chapters by talented philosophical minds probes some of the many lessons to be learned from Orange Is the New Black (mostly the addictive Netflix comedy-drama but with some attention to the best-selling real-life book by Piper Kerman).

The show and the book that inspired it both dramatically highlight the troubling, stressful situation of millions of incarcerated Americans.

How do the shows shower scenes shed light on the classical mind-body problem?

How can we make our lives meaningful when our options are curtailed by authority?

What does it mean to manipulate someone, and why is it bad?

What can we learn about the peculiarity of human beliefs from Pennsatuckys notion of the gay agenda?

Is Litchfield Prison a preparation for life outsideor just a scale model of life outside?

What could the governors of Litchfield learn from Jeremy Bentham and his panopticon?

How is it that even in prison we find ourselves condemned to be free?

Why is one of the worst things about prison being forced to see who and what we really are?

It so happens that life in prison is absolutely full and overfull of philosophical implications. Orange Is the New Black and Philosophy stays close to the characters and scenes of the TV show, applying insights from ethics, existentialism, metaphysics, epistemology, and political philosophy.

The book is aimed at thoughtful fans of this amazingly fine TV show, who want to learn more about its disturbing issues.

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Product Details
Open Court
0812699084 / 9780812699081
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
17/08/2015
English
245 pages
Copy: 20%; print: 20%
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