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What does it mean to understand the world on your own terms? What does it mean to question the hierarchies that shape our lives-our workplaces, our classrooms, our politics, even the stories we tell ourselves? And what does liberation look like when we begin with the truths we have lived, rather than the ideologies we inherit? In Autonomy in the First Person, Mason Carter offers a bold and deeply personal collection of essays that challenge the taken-for-granted structures of modern life. Blending philosophy, political analysis, memory, and lived experience, Carter examines how domination…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
What does it mean to understand the world on your own terms? What does it mean to question the hierarchies that shape our lives-our workplaces, our classrooms, our politics, even the stories we tell ourselves? And what does liberation look like when we begin with the truths we have lived, rather than the ideologies we inherit? In Autonomy in the First Person, Mason Carter offers a bold and deeply personal collection of essays that challenge the taken-for-granted structures of modern life. Blending philosophy, political analysis, memory, and lived experience, Carter examines how domination hides in plain sight-in economic systems, in educational institutions, in gendered expectations, and in the subtle ways we are taught to obey without ever noticing the conditioning.
Autorenporträt
Mason Carter (pen name of Mushahid Syed) is a poet, fiction writer, translator, and professor at Shah Abdul Latif University, Ghotki Campus, where he has taught since 2018. His work explores themes of social justice, autonomy, and community, blending lyricism with philosophy and political imagination. A lifelong bookworm, he began writing poetry and fiction in 2010 and draws inspiration from Gothic and radical voices such as Poe, Blake, Gibran, and Bookchin. When not teaching or writing, he enjoys reading, Netflix, and study circles with friends. He lives in Pakistan and finds his greatest inspiration in his daughter, Elsa.