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Social acceleration, alienation, and resonance: Hartmut Rosa's writings applied to nursing.

Camelia López-DefloryAmélie PerronMargalida Miró-Bonet
Published in: Nursing inquiry (2022)
This article aims to present the life and work of German thinker Hartmut Rosa as a philosopher of interest for nursing. Although his theoretical framework remains fairly unknown in the nursing domain, its main key concepts open up a philosophical and sociological approach that can contribute to the understanding of a wide range of study phenomena related to nurses, nursing, and healthcare. The concepts of social acceleration, alienation, and resonance are useful to explore healthcare organizations' performance by bringing the time dimension of modernity to the center; to grasp nurses' experiences of caring for patients; and to understand nurses as agents endowed with the capacity to deploy their political agency to create alternative forms of relationship to themselves, to others, and the world, challenging the institutional order of healthcare organizations when it fails to resonate with their professional ethos. In this article, we propose Hartmut Rosa's theoretical framework as a new and inspiring phenomenological and critical lens that should be further explored to advance knowledge concerning phenomena that are found at the crossroads of the nursing domain and other fields of knowledge.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • ejection fraction
  • newly diagnosed
  • minimally invasive
  • energy transfer
  • prognostic factors
  • quality improvement
  • patient reported outcomes
  • social media
  • affordable care act
  • health insurance