The Happiness Industry: How the Government and Big Business Sold us Well-Being

The Happiness Industry: How the Government and Big Business Sold us Well-Being

by William Davies
The Happiness Industry: How the Government and Big Business Sold us Well-Being

The Happiness Industry: How the Government and Big Business Sold us Well-Being

by William Davies

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Overview

“Deeply researched and pithily argued.” —New York Magazine

“A brilliant, and sometimes eerie, dissection” of ‘the science of happiness’ and the modern-day commercialization of our most private emotions (Vice)

Why are we so obsessed with measuring happiness?
 
In winter 2014, a Tibetan monk lectured the world leaders gathered at Davos on the importance of Happiness. The recent DSM-5, the manual of all diagnosable mental illnesses, for the first time included shyness and grief as treatable diseases. Happiness has become the biggest idea of our age, a new religion dedicated to well-being.
 
Here, political economist William Davies shows how this philosophy, first pronounced by Jeremy Bentham in the 1780s, has dominated the political debates that have delivered neoliberalism. From a history of business strategies of how to get the best out of employees, to the increased level of surveillance measuring every aspect of our lives; from why experts prefer to measure the chemical in the brain than ask you how you are feeling, to why Freakonomics tells us less about the way people behave than expected, The Happiness Industry is an essential guide to the marketization of modern life. Davies shows that the science of happiness is less a science than an extension of hyper-capitalism.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781781688472
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication date: 05/12/2015
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 452 KB

About the Author

William Davies is the author of The Limits of Neoliberalism. His writing has appeared in New Left Review, Prospect, the Financial Times, and Open Democracy. His website www.potlatch.co.uk was featured in the New York Times. He teaches at Goldsmiths, London.

Table of Contents

Preface 1

1 Knowing How You Feel 13

2 The Price of Pleasure 41

3 In the Mood to Buy 71

4 The Psychosomatic Worker 105

5 The Crisis of Authority 139

6 Social Optimization 181

7 Living in the Lab 215

8 Critical Animals 245

Acknowledgements 277

Notes 281

Index 303

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