Synopses & Reviews
The Handbook for Health Care Management is about management and the manager's real and potential contribution to a more effective and efficient health care system. The book consists of a series of original chapters written by experts in a number of areas of health care management and leadership. All the authors have made important and significant contributions to our understanding of their areas through their research and writing. The Handbook provides a unique opportunity for this group of experts to share their ideas, state them in a concise manner, and offer useful suggestions to prospective health care managers. Just as the authors were carefully chosen, the topics for inclusion were carefully evaluated. The fourteen topics included in this handbook represent the consensus of this diverse and informed group.
The Handbook for Health Care Management is organised around three major parts. Part I deals with the management of relationships. Part II focuses on the tools managers possess in developing and maintaining efficient and effective organisations. Part III examines key organizational processes with chapters on team building, visionary leadership, change and innovation, organizational design , and motivation.
Review
"McNeill and Feldman have assembled a superb and comprehensive collection of crucial texts from Kant to Baudrillard ranging over all the important issues to continental thought. An indispensable tool for any course in continental thought." -- John D. Caputo, Villanova University
Synopsis
The Handbook for Health Care Management is about management and the manager's real and potential contribution to a more effective and efficient health care system.
Synopsis
The Handbook for Health Care Management is about management and the manager's real and potential contribution to a more effective and efficient health care system.
Synopsis
From Immanuel Kant to Postmodernism, this volume provides an unparalleled student resource: a wide-ranging collection of the essential works of more than 50 seminal thinkers in modern European philosophy.
Areas covered include Kant and German Idealism, Existentialism, Phenomenology, Hermeneutics, Marxism and the Frankfurt School, Structuralism, Psychoanalysis, Feminism, Deconstruction, and Postmodernism. Each section begins with a concise and helpful introduction, and all the texts have been selected for accessibility as well as significance, making the volume ideal for introductory and advanced levels in philosophy, cultural studies, literary theory, and the history of modern thought.
About the Author
W. Jack Duncan is Professor and University Scholar in Management in the Graduate School of Management and Professor of Health Care Organization and Policy and a Senior Scholar in the Lister Hill Centre for Health Policy in the School of Public Health at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Table of Contents
Introduction.
Part I: The Age of the Systems: Kant and German Idealism.
1. Critique of Pure Reason (Immanuel Kant).
2. An Attempt at a New Presentation of the Wissenschaftslehre (Johann Gottlieb Fichte).
3. Judgemant and Being (Friedrich Hölderlin).
4. The Oldest Program Towards a System in German Idealism).
5. Systems of Transcendental Idealism (Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling)6. Phenomenology of Spirit (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel).
Part II: Subjectivity in Question: Existentialism, Phenomenology, and Hermeneutics.
1. The World as Will and Representation (Arthur Schopenhauer).
2. Either/or (Soren Kierkegaard).
3. The Gay Science; Twilight of the Idols; The Will to Power (Friedrich Nietsche).
4. The Perception of Change (Henri Bergson).
5. Cartesian Mediatations (Edmund Husserl).
6. Being and Time (Martin Heidegger).
7. Man's Place in Nature (Max Scheler).
8. Philosophy of Existence (Karl Jaspers).
9. Introduction to the Reading of Hegel (Alexandre Kojève).
10. Being and Nothingness (Jean-Paul Sartre).
11. The Second Sex (Simone de Beauvoir).
12. The Visible and the Invisible (Maurice Merleau-Ponty).
13. The Trace of the Other (Emmanuel Levinas).
14. The Universality of the Hermeneutical Problem (Hans-Georg Gadamer).
15. Metaphor and the Central Problem of Hermeneutics (Paul Ricoeur).
Part III: Political Thought: Marxism and Critical Theory.
1. The Philosophy of Right (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel).
2. Alienated Labor: The German Ideology (Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels).
3. Democracy and Dictatorship (Rosa Luxembourg).
4. History and Class Consciousness (Georg Lukacs).
5. What is a Man (Antonio Gramsci).
6. The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction (Walter Benjamin).
7. Dialectic of Enlightenment (Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer).
8. The Human Condition (Hannah Arendt).
9. For Marx (Louis Althusser).
10. One-Dimensional Man (Herbert Marcuse).
11. Knowledge and Human Interests (Jürgen Habermas).
Part VI: Structuralism and Psychoanalysis.
1. Course in General Linguistics (Ferdinand de Saussure).
2. The Elementary Structures of Kinship (Claude Lévi-Strauss).
3. The Structuralist Activity (Roland Barthes).
4. Beyond the Pleasure Principle; Femininity (Sigmund Freud).
5. The Mirror Stage; The Significance of the Phallus (Jacques Lacan).
Part V: Deconstruction, Feminism, and Postmodernism.
1. The Use Value of D. A. F. de Sade (Georges Bataille).
2. The Space of Literature (Maurice Blanchot).
3. Of Grammatology (Jacques Derrida).
4. Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari).
5. Sorties: Out and Out: Attacks/ Ways Out/ Forays (Hélène Cixous).
6. The History of Sexuality (Michel Foucault).
7. The Post-Modern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (Jean-François Lyotard).
8. Women's Time (Julia Kristeva).
9. The Enigma of Woman (Sarah Kofman).
10. Sexual Difference (Luce Irigaray).
11. The Inoperative Community (Jean-Luc Nancy).
12. The Ecstasy of Communication (Jean Baudrillard).
13. The Nation-Thing (Slavoj Zizek).
Index.