000 01442naa a2200193uu 4500
001 6111714571321
003 OSt
005 20190211161354.0
008 061117s1998 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aMILLER, Hugh T.
_97239
245 1 0 _aThe irony of privatization
260 _aThousand Oaks :
_bSAGE,
_cNovember 1998
520 3 _aWhat does privatization really mean? It depends on who is speaking and the specific language game in use. This article borrows an interpretive device, originally developed by Roland Barthes and further articulated by Jean Baudrillard, which lays waste to the assertion that a word has a single denotative meaning. Such an interpretation (that words represent, or correspond to, reality) is but the first step of a progressively unreal simulacrum that moves to skepticism, through masking (where a word connotes the radical absence of the object it points toward) to hyperreality. Hyperreality is the domain of self-referential imagery, where words and symbols refer only to themselves but provide titillation and visceral gratification in the process. The authors conclude that the very term privatization lacks foundational stability
700 1 _aSIMMONS, James R.
_928259
773 0 8 _tAdministration & Society
_g30, 5, p. 513-532
_dThousand Oaks : SAGE, November 1998
_xISSN 00953997
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20061117
_b1457^b
_cNatália
998 _a20100805
_b1533^b
_cCarolina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c19862
_d19862
041 _aeng