02067nam a22003493i 450000100190000000500170001900600190003600700150005500800410007002000180011103500240012903500250015303500240017803500220020203500280022404000410025204100120029310000240030524500450032925000180037426400360039230000140042852009840044265000410142665000250146765000290149265000420152165000400156394200080160395200910161199900150170299110763435500619620260304145238.0m o d | cr cnu||||||||251018s2025 xx o ||||0 eng d a9781804298107 a(MiAaPQ)EBC31811879 a(Au-PeEL)EBL31811879 a(CKB)41646079900041 a(OCoLC)1545643737 a(EXLCZ)9941646079900041 aMiAaPQbengerdaepncMiAaPQdMiAaPQ aEnglish aKurt, Seyda.92679310aHate b: The Uses of a Powerful Emotion. aFirst edition 1aNew York :bVerso Books,c2025. a156 pages aWho is allowed to hate? Hatred, this grating, corrosive feeling, is omnipresent, roaring from the streets or whispered in bourgeois homes. It thrives in parliamentary speeches, conspiracy theorists' fantasies and children's bedrooms - and certainly not in secret, even if many would like to see it restricted there. German bestselling author Seyda Kurt frees hatred from its banishment and sets out on the trail of its potential for resistance. She is particularly interested in people as subjects of hatred in a capitalist, racist and patriarchal world. Who are these haters and what power relations do they base them selves on? Who is allowed to hate? Which feelings paralyse, and which ones guide us to a fairer, more caring society? Ruthlessly, humorously and going beyond any self-righteous indignation, Seyda Kurt explores the possibility of a serviceable hatred that connects with people who feel a deep sense of discontent and helps us to find a collective way forward. 0aHatred — Political aspects.926794 0aSocial conflict9355 0aPolitical culture925645 0aSocial justice — Philosophy.926796 0aEmotions — Social aspects.926795 2lcc 00102lcc4070aTBSbTBSd2026-03-04l0r2026-03-04t1w2026-03-04y1zSOON AVAILABLE c5379d5379