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Honey money : the power of erotic capital / Catherine Hakim.

By: Hakim, Catherine [author.].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : New Delhi : Allen Lane, Penguin, 2011Description: 372 p. ; 23 cm.ISBN: 9780241952214 (pbk); 9781846144196 (hbk.); 1846144191 (hbk.).Subject(s): Interpersonal attraction | Charisma (Personality trait) | SuccessDDC classification: 302.13 Summary: "In 2010, pioneering sociologist Catherine Hakim shocked the world with a provocative new theory: In addition to the three recognized personal assets (economic, cultural, and social capital), each individual has a fourth asset-erotic capital-that he or she can, and should, use to advance within society. In this bold and controversial book, Hakim explores the applications and significance of erotic capital, challenging the disapproval meted out to women and men who use sex appeal to get ahead in life. Social scientists have paid little serious attention to these modes of personal empowerment, despite overwhelming evidence of their importance. In Erotic Capital, Hakim marshals a trove of research to show that rather than degrading those who employ it, erotic capital represents a powerful and potentially equalizing tool-one that we scorn only to our own detriment"
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Item type Current location Call number Copy number Status Date due
Monograph Monograph Indian Institute of Management Udaipur
A6/3
302.13 (Browse shelf) 1 Available

Includes bibliographical references and index.

"In 2010, pioneering sociologist Catherine Hakim shocked the world with a provocative new theory: In addition to the three recognized personal assets (economic, cultural, and social capital), each individual has a fourth asset-erotic capital-that he or she can, and should, use to advance within society. In this bold and controversial book, Hakim explores the applications and significance of erotic capital, challenging the disapproval meted out to women and men who use sex appeal to get ahead in life. Social scientists have paid little serious attention to these modes of personal empowerment, despite overwhelming evidence of their importance. In Erotic Capital, Hakim marshals a trove of research to show that rather than degrading those who employ it, erotic capital represents a powerful and potentially equalizing tool-one that we scorn only to our own detriment"

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