The Shame Machine

Who Profits in the New Age of Humiliation

The Shame Machine
Cathy O'Neil
RRP:
NZ$ 63.99
Our Price:
NZ$ 51.19
Hardback
h222 x 138mm - 272pg
22 Mar 2022 UK
International import eta 10-19 days
9780241574256
Out Of Stock
Currently no stock in-store, stock is sourced to your order
' With moral clarity and powerful storytelling, Cathy O' Neil reverse engineers the ' shame machine,' revealing its inner workings and inciting nothing short of a cultural reckoning that has the potential to blow this machine to bits' - Ruha Benjamin Shame is being weaponized by governments and corporations to attack the most vulnerable. It' s time to fight back Shame is a powerful and sometimes useful tool. When we publicly shame corrupt politicians, abusive celebrities, or predatory corporations, we reinforce values of fairness and justice. But as best-selling author Cathy O' Neil argues in this revelatory book, shaming has taken a new and dangerous turn. It is increasingly being weaponized -- used as a way to shift responsibility for social problems from institutions to individuals. Shaming children for not being able to afford school lunches or adults for not being able to find work lets us off the hook as a society. After all, why pay higher taxes to fund programmes for people who are fundamentally unworthy? O' Neil explores the machinery behind all this shame, showing how governments, corporations and the healthcare system capitalize on it. There are damning stories of rehab clinics, reentry programs, drug and diet companies, and social media platforms -- all of which profit from ' punching down' on the vulnerable. Woven throughout The Shame Machine is the story of O' Neil' s own struggle with body image and her recent weight-loss surgery, which awakened her to the systematic shaming of fat people seeking medical care. With clarity and nuance, O' Neil dissects the relationship between shame and power. Whom does the system serve? How do current incentive structures perpetuate the shaming cycle? And, most important, how can we all fight back?
A unique and riveting look at a crucial yet little understood aspect of modern life * Publisher' s Weekly * In this trenchant, and at times heartbreaking, critique of the shame industrial complex, Cathy O' Neil lays bare how shame underpins the deep divides of modern society. But not all shame is bad, O' Neil contends -- used correctly it can be a powerful tool to fight injustice -- Nicole Aschoff, author of The New Prophets of Capital An intimate and unflinching account of the many ways that shame is produced, weaponized, and turned into profit by industries that can only grow big when we feel small. With moral clarity and powerful storytelling, Cathy O' Neil reverse engineers the ' shame machine,' revealing its inner workings and inciting nothing short of a cultural reckoning that has the potential to blow this machine to bits -- Ruha Benjamin, author of Race After Technology Cathy O' Neil' s fascinating, important, and insightful book is a hard look in the mirror, but one that also gives us hope that we can marshal shame into a force for social reform and not just social punishment -- Michael Patrick Lynch, author of Know-it-All Society Cathy O' Neil' s Weapons of Math Destruction was a thunderclap -- using wonderfully vivid stories, it exposed the dehumanizing effects of a data-driven world. The Shame Machine is even more personal, but no less devastating. Whether it' s through body-shaming mobs or a deeply flawed judicial system, humans use shame as a weapon to bully, demean, and devalue other humans. And with the unstoppable growth of digital tools, this power has become far too great. O' Neil reminds us that we must resist the urge to judge, belittle and oversimplify, and instead allow always for complexity and lead always with empathy -- Dave Eggers, author of The Every What is the relationship between shame and power - and is shame being weaponised? Smart thinker Cathy O' Neil tackles the question in this book, exploring whether public shaming is becoming dangerous * Evening Standard *
Cathy O' Neil is the author of the bestselling Weapons of Math Destruction, which won the Euler Book Prize and was longlisted for the National Book Award. She received her PhD in mathematics from Harvard and has worked in finance, tech, and academia. She launched the Lede Program for data journalism at Columbia University and recently founded ORCAA, an algorithmic auditing company. O' Neil is a regular contributor to Bloomberg View.

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