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What if hierarchy isn't just a social construct-but a linguistic one?
In The Language of Betterarchy, Dani Katz maps the relationship between language, perception, and systemic design, revealing how everyday patterns of speech reinforce structures of dominance, division and disempowerment.
This is not a critique from the outside. It's a sassy, subversive examination enacted from within the construct itself.
At the core of the book is a simple but thoroughly paradigm-shattering premise: Language doesn't just describe reality-it generates it.
Which means hierarchy's persistence is not accidental, and isn't something we can blame on the powers-that-were. It means that hierarchy is sustained and empowered through the words we use, the distinctions we make, and the frameworks we leave unexamined.
Inside, Katz:
* deconstructs the linguistic patterns that encode hierarchical value judgments into human systems
* explores how distorted masculine/feminine dynamics manifest in language-and scale into institutional and societal structures
* illuminates how you, me and all of us are responsible for sustaining an outdated organizational structure steeped in inequality, lack, fear and separation
* outlines the ten markers of hierarchical languaging, giving readers a precise diagnostic tool for identifying these patterns in real time
* reframes the so-called "return of the divine feminine" as a restoration of polarity balance at the level of thinking, framing and perceiving, rather than an otherwise empty cultural slogan
* offers a pathway for shifting from unconscious participation in hierarchy to conscious linguistic authorship and cultural evolution
This is not about adopting new beliefs. It's about taking responsibility for the generative power of language - and recognizing that cultural evolution is enacted with our every word.
To move beyond hierarchy, we don't just need new systems. We need new methods of meaning-making. And those begin and end with our words.
In The Language of Betterarchy, Dani Katz maps the relationship between language, perception, and systemic design, revealing how everyday patterns of speech reinforce structures of dominance, division and disempowerment.
This is not a critique from the outside. It's a sassy, subversive examination enacted from within the construct itself.
At the core of the book is a simple but thoroughly paradigm-shattering premise: Language doesn't just describe reality-it generates it.
Which means hierarchy's persistence is not accidental, and isn't something we can blame on the powers-that-were. It means that hierarchy is sustained and empowered through the words we use, the distinctions we make, and the frameworks we leave unexamined.
Inside, Katz:
* deconstructs the linguistic patterns that encode hierarchical value judgments into human systems
* explores how distorted masculine/feminine dynamics manifest in language-and scale into institutional and societal structures
* illuminates how you, me and all of us are responsible for sustaining an outdated organizational structure steeped in inequality, lack, fear and separation
* outlines the ten markers of hierarchical languaging, giving readers a precise diagnostic tool for identifying these patterns in real time
* reframes the so-called "return of the divine feminine" as a restoration of polarity balance at the level of thinking, framing and perceiving, rather than an otherwise empty cultural slogan
* offers a pathway for shifting from unconscious participation in hierarchy to conscious linguistic authorship and cultural evolution
This is not about adopting new beliefs. It's about taking responsibility for the generative power of language - and recognizing that cultural evolution is enacted with our every word.
To move beyond hierarchy, we don't just need new systems. We need new methods of meaning-making. And those begin and end with our words.
What if hierarchy isn't just a social construct-but a linguistic one?
In The Language of Betterarchy, Dani Katz maps the relationship between language, perception, and systemic design, revealing how everyday patterns of speech reinforce structures of dominance, division and disempowerment.
This is not a critique from the outside. It's a sassy, subversive examination enacted from within the construct itself.
At the core of the book is a simple but thoroughly paradigm-shattering premise: Language doesn't just describe reality-it generates it.
Which means hierarchy's persistence is not accidental, and isn't something we can blame on the powers-that-were. It means that hierarchy is sustained and empowered through the words we use, the distinctions we make, and the frameworks we leave unexamined.
Inside, Katz:
* deconstructs the linguistic patterns that encode hierarchical value judgments into human systems
* explores how distorted masculine/feminine dynamics manifest in language-and scale into institutional and societal structures
* illuminates how you, me and all of us are responsible for sustaining an outdated organizational structure steeped in inequality, lack, fear and separation
* outlines the ten markers of hierarchical languaging, giving readers a precise diagnostic tool for identifying these patterns in real time
* reframes the so-called "return of the divine feminine" as a restoration of polarity balance at the level of thinking, framing and perceiving, rather than an otherwise empty cultural slogan
* offers a pathway for shifting from unconscious participation in hierarchy to conscious linguistic authorship and cultural evolution
This is not about adopting new beliefs. It's about taking responsibility for the generative power of language - and recognizing that cultural evolution is enacted with our every word.
To move beyond hierarchy, we don't just need new systems. We need new methods of meaning-making. And those begin and end with our words.
In The Language of Betterarchy, Dani Katz maps the relationship between language, perception, and systemic design, revealing how everyday patterns of speech reinforce structures of dominance, division and disempowerment.
This is not a critique from the outside. It's a sassy, subversive examination enacted from within the construct itself.
At the core of the book is a simple but thoroughly paradigm-shattering premise: Language doesn't just describe reality-it generates it.
Which means hierarchy's persistence is not accidental, and isn't something we can blame on the powers-that-were. It means that hierarchy is sustained and empowered through the words we use, the distinctions we make, and the frameworks we leave unexamined.
Inside, Katz:
* deconstructs the linguistic patterns that encode hierarchical value judgments into human systems
* explores how distorted masculine/feminine dynamics manifest in language-and scale into institutional and societal structures
* illuminates how you, me and all of us are responsible for sustaining an outdated organizational structure steeped in inequality, lack, fear and separation
* outlines the ten markers of hierarchical languaging, giving readers a precise diagnostic tool for identifying these patterns in real time
* reframes the so-called "return of the divine feminine" as a restoration of polarity balance at the level of thinking, framing and perceiving, rather than an otherwise empty cultural slogan
* offers a pathway for shifting from unconscious participation in hierarchy to conscious linguistic authorship and cultural evolution
This is not about adopting new beliefs. It's about taking responsibility for the generative power of language - and recognizing that cultural evolution is enacted with our every word.
To move beyond hierarchy, we don't just need new systems. We need new methods of meaning-making. And those begin and end with our words.
Über den Autor
Dani Katz is an author, communication strategist, and systems thinker whose work focuses on the relationship between language, perception, and performance. At the core of her work is a precise, and often overlooked premise: Language is not neutral. It is a powerful programming technology that shapes how we perceive reality, influences how we think, structures our identities and belief systems, and directly impacts the decisions we make and the results we produce. Katz works across two levels simultaneously: At the individual level, she helps people identify and correct subtle patterns of linguistic imprecision that create cognitive chaos and disempowering belief systems, and that distort perception and limit performance. At the systems level, she examines how those same patterns scale into culture-reinforcing hierarchy, shaping divisive and disempowering narratives, and influencing how human systems are programmed and maintained. Her books reflect this dual lens-offering both applied tools for refining everyday communications and deeper frameworks for understanding how language functions as the underlying architecture of our every human [...] work is revered by high-performing individuals who value clarity, precision, and self-responsibility-and who understand that the way they think and speak is inseparable from how they perform.
Details
| Erscheinungsjahr: | 2023 |
|---|---|
| Genre: | Importe |
| Rubrik: | Sprachwissenschaft |
| Medium: | Taschenbuch |
| ISBN-13: | 9781956257861 |
| ISBN-10: | 1956257861 |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
| Autor: | Katz, Dani |
| Hersteller: | Pierucci Publishing |
| Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de |
| Maße: | 229 x 152 x 16 mm |
| Von/Mit: | Dani Katz |
| Erscheinungsdatum: | 21.09.2023 |
| Gewicht: | 0,427 kg |