Strange Contagion

Strange Contagion
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 3 (1)

Inside the Surprising Science of Infectious Behaviors and Viral Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves

مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2017

نویسنده

Lee Daniel Kravetz

ناشر

Harper Wave

شابک

9780062448958
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
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نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

May 8, 2017
Kravetz (coauthor of Supersurvivors) takes readers along on his six-year journey to discover why eight teenagers in Palo Alto, Calif., ended their own lives in the same manner. Rather than search for causes within the victims’ own short lives, Kravetz considers this cluster of similar suicides as a whole, asking how people consciously or unconsciously catch infectious ideas and behaviors. In conversations with behavioral experts, Kravetz considers how behaviors such as eating disorders, emotional burnout, hysteria, fear, violence, suicide, and even a bizarre case of impulsive uncontrollable laughter can become contagious and get transmitted throughout a community. One observation Kravetz makes is that “people unconsciously catch goals from one another” in ways that can reshape behavior. Solutions to the spread of these behaviors are frustratingly difficult to come by, in part because the possible cures contain their own problematic paradox: talking about infectious behaviors, even with the best of intentions, can perpetuate the contagion. Though the subject of Kravetz’s book may be emotionally disturbing for sensitive readers, the questions he asks are of vital importance. His bold conclusions—that Palo Alto’s particular contagion “is not going to stop” and that “each of us must watch out for one another, especially when we do not have the language to express our pain”—are sobering and potentially lifesaving.



Kirkus

May 1, 2017
Yawning can be contagious. Suicide, too, as this intriguing book shows.A little knowledge can be a dangerous thing. Take bulimia, for instance. As journalist and psychologist Kravetz (co-author: Supersurvivors: The Surprising Link Between Suffering and Success, 2014) writes, once bulimia was separated from anorexia and described in the psychological literature, the incidence of the disease grew and even spread to places where it had been unknown. Said the author who first wrote it up, "once it was described, and I take full responsibility for that...there was a common language for it." Now, it seems, psychologists are seeking a common language for epidemic suicide, the larger subject of Kravetz's look at how harmful memes spread and to which he was introduced when, soon after moving to Silicon Valley, he was on hand to record instances of children killing or harming themselves in patterns that suggest social contagion in all its varieties of "thought, behavior, or emotion." The author moves about in space and time to address this phenomenon, sometimes with a little definitional fuzziness ("if something as universal as economics can cue a social contagion like greed..."), eventually settling on the notion of primes, or cues "that unconsciously convince people to accept new thoughts, behaviors, and emotions." Such cues surround us, thanks to the pervasiveness of advertising and political argument, and while some of them may suggest to the unwary that killing oneself is a cool thing to do, they also suggest that we buy things, vote for people, and suchlike things in subconscious ways--ways that succeed, notes the author, when it seems as if they are ideas of our own, formed without outside influence. Kravetz's account is too first-personal at too many turns ("Beyond my journalist's penchant for analysis, I personally need to understand if there's a solution..."), but he has covered the bases well, raising provocative questions on whether social contagion can be contained in the way that we ward off leprosy and smallpox. A worthy, only occasionally clunky treatise on matters of urgent concern.

COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.




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