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  • GBV  (23)
  • Kalliope (Nachlässe)
  • Durham : Duke University Press  (23)
  • SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social  (23)
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9781478024378
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (407 p.)
    Series Statement: Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography
    Series Statement: 47
    Keywords: Medical anthropology ; Social medicine ; Discrimination in medical care ; Public health Anthropological aspects ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; MEDICAL / Public Health ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: "The radically humanistic essays of Arc of Interference refigure our sense of the real, the ethical, and the political in the face of mounting social and planetary upheavals. Creatively assembled around Arthur Kleinman's medical anthropological arc and eschewing hegemonic modes of intervention, they advance the notion of a care-ful ethnographic praxis of interference. To interfere is to dislodge ideals of naturalness, blast enduring binaries (human-nonhuman, self-other, us-them), and redirect technocratic agendas while summoning relational knowledge and the will to create community. The book's multiple ethnographic arcs of interference provide a vital conceptual toolkit for today's world and a badly needed moral perch to peer toward just horizons. Contributors. Vincanne Adams, João Biehl, Davíd Carrasco, Lawrence Cohen, Jean Comaroff, Robert Desjarlais, Paul Farmer, Marcia Inhorn, Janis H. Jenkins, David S. Jones, Salmaan Keshavjee, Arthur Kleinman, Margaret Lock, Adriana Petryna"--
    Note: Frontmatter , CONTENTS , FOREWORD , INTRODUCTION , PART I Traversing Imperiled Worlds and Envisaging Human Futures , Introduction , 1 Death by Fire: The Problem of Moral Certainty in China’s Tibet , 2 Bringing Up the Bodies: Erasing and Caring for Mexicans in the Mexico-US Borderlands , 3 In the Vast Abrupt: Horizon Work in an Age of Runaway Climate Change , PART II The Category Fallacy and Care amid the Experts , Introduction , 4 Justifying a Lower Standard of Health Care for the World’s Poor: A Call for Decolonizing Global Health , 5 The Moral Economies of Heart Disease and Cardiac Care in India , 6 Intimate and Social Spheres of Mental Illness , PART III Worlds of Biotechnological Promise and the Plasticity of Self and Power , Introduction , 7 A Good Death: The Promise and Threat of Biometric Inclusion for Transgender Women in India , 8 Medical Cosmopolitanism in Moral Worlds: Aspirations and Stratifications in Global Quests for Conception , 9 Environments and Mutable Selves , PART IV Tracing Arts of Living (Or, Anthropologies after Hope Has Departed) , Introduction , 10 Anthropology in a Mode of Dying , 11 Ethnographic Open , 12 Thinking on Borrowed Time . . . About Privileging the Human , AFTERWORD Lessons Learned from the Ethnography of Care , IN MEMORIAM , ACKNOWLEDGMENTS , BIBLIOGRAPHY , CONTRIBUTORS , INDEX , In English
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  • 2
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    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478022961
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xviii, 201 Seiten) , Illustrationen, Karten
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 304.209519
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    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Biodiversity conservation ; Biodiversity conservation ; Ecology ; Ecology ; Human ecology ; Human ecology ; Korean War, 1950-1953 Environmental aspects ; Grenzgebiet ; Feldforschung ; Biodiversität ; Wissenschaft ; Korea ; Korea ; Grenzgebiet ; Biodiversität ; Wissenschaft ; Feldforschung
    Abstract: The Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) has been off-limits to human habitation for nearly seventy years, and in that time, biodiverse forms of life have flourished in and around the DMZ as beneficiaries of an unresolved war. In Making Peace with Nature Eleana J. Kim shows how a closer examination of the DMZ in South Korea reveals that the area's biodiversity is inseparable from scientific practices and geopolitical, capitalist, and ecological dynamics. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork with ecologists, scientists, and local residents, Kim focuses on irrigation ponds, migratory bird flyways, and land mines in the South Korean DMZ area, demonstrating how human and nonhuman ecologies interact and transform in spaces defined by war and militarization. In so doing, Kim reframes peace away from a human-oriented political or economic peace and toward a more-than-human, biological peace. Such a peace recognizes the reality of war while pointing to potential forms of human and nonhuman relations
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9781478008880
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xvi, 310 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.5/2
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    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Celebrities in mass media ; Fame Social aspects ; Hispanic American mass media ; Hispanic Americans in mass media ; Mass media and culture ; Mass media Political aspects ; Paparazzi ; Popular culture ; Women journalists ; Berühmte Persönlichkeit ; Paparazzo ; Regenbogenpresse ; Diskriminierung ; USA ; Los Angeles- Hollywood ; USA ; Los Angeles- Hollywood ; Berühmte Persönlichkeit ; Regenbogenpresse ; Paparazzo ; Diskriminierung
    Abstract: In Manufacturing Celebrity Vanessa Díaz traces the complex power dynamics of the reporting and paparazzi work that fuel contemporary Hollywood and American celebrity culture. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, her experience reporting for People magazine, and dozens of interviews with photographers, journalists, publicists, magazine editors, and celebrities, Díaz examines the racialized and gendered labor involved in manufacturing and selling relatable celebrity personas. Celebrity reporters, most of whom are white women, are expected to leverage their sexuality to generate coverage, which makes them vulnerable to sexual exploitation and assault. Meanwhile, the predominantly male Latino paparazzi can face life-threatening situations and endure vilification that echoes anti-immigrant rhetoric. In pointing out the precarity of those who hustle to make a living by generating the bulk of celebrity media, Díaz highlights the profound inequities of the systems that provide consumers with 24/7 coverage of their favorite stars
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  • 4
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    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478012092
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (258 Seiten)
    Series Statement: Global Insecurities
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 342.7308
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    Keywords: temporary worker status ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Emigration and immigration law ; Emigration and immigration law ; Identification cards Law and legislation ; Identification cards Law and legislation ; Formular ; Dokumentation ; Aufenthaltsgenehmigung ; Migration ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Migration ; Dokumentation ; Formular ; Aufenthaltsgenehmigung
    Abstract: Across the globe, states have long aimed to control the movement of people, identify their citizens, and restrict noncitizens' rights through official identification documents. Although states are now less likely to grant permanent legal status, they are increasingly issuing new temporary and provisional legal statuses to migrants. Meanwhile, the need for migrants to apply for frequent renewals subjects them to more intensive state surveillance. The contributors to Paper Trails examine how these new developments change migrants' relationship to state, local, and foreign bureaucracies. The contributors analyze, among other toics, immigration policies in the United Kingdom, the issuing of driver's licenses in Arizona and New Mexico, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, and community know-your-rights campaigns. By demonstrating how migrants are inscribed into official bureaucratic systems through the issuance of identification documents, the contributors open up new ways to understand how states exert their power and how migrants must navigate new systems of governance.Contributors. Bridget Anderson, Deborah A. Boehm, Susan Bibler Coutin, Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz, Sarah B. Horton, Josiah Heyman, Cecilia Menjívar, Juan Thomas Ordóñez, Doris Marie Provine, Nandita Sharma, Monica Varsanyi
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9781478010296
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (233 Seiten)
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Abreu, Maria José A. de, - 1970- The charismatic gymnasium
    DDC: 306.60981
    Keywords: Anthropology of religion ; Christianity ; Leadership Religious aspects ; Catholic Church ; Religion and politics ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Electronic books ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Preface: Breathe In. Breathe Out -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- PART I -- 1. The Media Acts of the Apostles -- 2. Confession, Technically Speaking -- 3. Outstanding Elasticity -- PART II -- 4. The Aerobics of Jesus -- 5. Sanctuary Theotókos: A Conception -- 6. Ghost Chair -- Epilogue: Theology on the Run -- Afterword: On Bipolarity -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index
    Abstract: In The Charismatic Gymnasium Maria José de Abreu examines how Charismatic Catholicism in contemporary Brazil produces a new form of total power through a concatenation of the breathing body, theology, and electronic mass media. De Abreu documents a vast religious respiratory program of revival popularly branded as “the aerobics of Jesus.” Pneuma—the Greek term for air, breath, and spirit—is central to this aerobic program, whose goal is to labor on the athletic elasticity of spirit. Tracing the rhetoric, gestures, and spaces that together constitute this new theological community, de Abreu exposes the articulating forces among evangelical Christianity, neoliberal logics, and the rise of right-wing politics. By calling attention to how an ethics of pauperism vitally intersects with the neoliberal ethos of flexibility, de Abreu shows how paradoxes do not hinder but expand the Charismatic gymnasium. The result, de Abreu demonstrates, is the production of a fluid form of totalitarianism and Christianity in Brazil and beyond.
    Note: In English
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9781478009252
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (xiii, 282 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 305.809/08
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Elite (Social sciences) ; Elite (Social sciences) ; Parenting ; Parenting ; Parents, White ; Parents, White ; Privilege (Social psychology) ; Privilege (Social psychology) ; Wealth Moral and ethical aspects ; Wealth Moral and ethical aspects ; Whites Race identity ; Whites Race identity ; Elite ; Weiße ; Elternschaft ; San Juan ; Rio de Janeiro ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; Rio de Janeiro ; San Juan ; Weiße ; Elite ; Elternschaft
    Abstract: In Parenting Empires, Ana Y. Ramos-Zayas focuses on the parenting practices of Latin American urban elites to analyze how everyday experiences of whiteness, privilege, and inequality reinforce national and hemispheric idioms of anti-corruption and austerity. Ramos-Zayas shows that for upper-class residents in the affluent neighborhoods of Ipanema (Rio de Janeiro) and El Condado (San Juan), parenting is particularly effective in providing moral grounding for neoliberal projects that disadvantage the overwhelmingly poor and racialized people who care for and teach their children. Wealthy parents in Ipanema and El Condado cultivate a liberal cosmopolitanism by living in multicultural city neighborhoods rather than gated suburban communities. Yet as Ramos-Zayas reveals, their parenting strategies, which stress spirituality, empathy, and equality, allow them to preserve and reproduce their white privilege. Defining this moral economy as "parenting empires," she sheds light on how child-rearing practices permit urban elites in the Global South to sustain and profit from entrenched social and racial hierarchies
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9781478004370
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (168 p.) , 10 illustrations
    DDC: 301
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    Keywords: Anthropology / Methodology ; Anthropology / Philosophy ; Anthropology ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In a time of intense uncertainty, social strife, and ecological upheaval, what does it take to envision the world as it yet may be? The field of anthropology, Anand Pandian argues, has resources essential for this critical and imaginative task. Anthropology is no stranger to injustice and exploitation. Still, its methods can reveal unseen dimensions of the world at hand and radical experience as the seed of a humanity yet to come. A Possible Anthropology is an ethnography of anthropologists at work: canonical figures like Bronislaw Malinowski and Claude Lévi-Strauss, ethnographic storytellers like Zora Neale Hurston and Ursula K. Le Guin, contemporary scholars like Jane Guyer and Michael Jackson, and artists and indigenous activists inspired by the field. In their company, Pandian explores the moral and political horizons of anthropological inquiry, the creative and transformative potential of an experimental practice
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9781478004592
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (472 pages) , 15 illustrations
    DDC: 305.800098
    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Ethnohistory ; Ethnology ; Postcolonialism
    Abstract: In The Fernando Coronil Reader Venezuelan anthropologist Fernando Coronil challenges us to rethink our approaches to key contemporary epistemological, political, and ethical questions. Consisting of work written between 1991 and 2011, this posthumously published collection includes Coronil's landmark essays "Beyond Occidentalism" and "The Future in Question" as well as two chapters from his unfinished book manuscript, "Crude Matters." Taken together, the essays highlight his deep concern with the Global South, Latin American state formation, theories of nature, empire, and postcolonialism, and anthrohistory as an intellectual and ethical approach. Presenting a cross section of Coronil's oeuvre, this volume cements his legacy as one of the most innovative critical social thinkers of his generation
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Sep 2020) , In English
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  • 9
    ISBN: 9781478002222
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (464 pages) , 16 illustrations
    Series Statement: Experimental futures : technological lives, scientific arts, anthropological voices
    DDC: 305.8
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    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Anthropology ; Ethnology ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: In Anthropology in the Meantime Michael M. J. Fischer draws on his real world, multi-causal, multi-scale, and multi-locale research to rebuild theory for the twenty-first century. Providing a history and inventory of experimental methods and frameworks in anthropology from the 1920s to the present, Fischer presents anthropology in the meantime as a methodological injunction to do ethnography that examines how the pieces of the world interact, fit together or clash, generate complex unforeseen consequences, reinforce cultural references, and cause social ruptures. Anthropology in the meantime requires patience, constant experimentation, collaboration, the sounding-out of affects and nonverbal communication, and the conducting of ethnographically situated research over longitudinal time. Perhaps above all, anthropology in the meantime is no longer anthropology of and about peoples; it is written with and for the people who are its subjects. Anthropology in the Meantime presents the possibility for creating new narratives and alternative futures
    Note: Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 28. Sep 2020) , In English
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  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822371922
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (296 p.) , 29 illustrations
    DDC: 294.54
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    Keywords: Globalization / Religious aspects ; Hinduism and culture / India / Bangalore ; Religious life / Hinduism ; Ritual ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In The Cow in the Elevator Tulasi Srinivas explores a wonderful world where deities jump fences and priests ride in helicopters to present a joyful, imaginative, yet critical reading of modern religious life. Drawing on nearly two decades of fieldwork with priests, residents, and devotees, and her own experience of living in the high-tech city of Bangalore, Srinivas finds moments where ritual enmeshes with global modernity to create wonder—a feeling of amazement at being overcome by the unexpected and sublime. Offering a nuanced account of how the ruptures of modernity can be made normal, enrapturing, and even comical in a city swept up in globalization's tumult, Srinivas brings the visceral richness of wonder—apparent in creative ritual in and around Hindu temples—into the anthropological gaze. Broaching provocative philosophical themes like desire, complicity, loss, time, money, technology, and the imagination, Srinivas pursues an interrogation of wonder and the adventure of writing true to its experience. The Cow in the Elevator rethinks the study of ritual while reshaping our appreciation of wonder's transformative potential for scholarship and for life
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9780822373261
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (264 p) , 4 illustrations
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Series Statement: School for Advanced Research Advanced Seminar
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
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    Keywords: Ethnology in literature ; Ethnology Authorship ; Anthropology in literature ; Anthropology Authorship ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Crumpled Paper Boat is a book of experimental ventures in ethnographic writing, an exploration of the possibilities of a literary anthropology. These original essays from notable writers in the field blur the boundaries between ethnography and genres such as poetry, fiction, memoir, and cinema. They address topics as diverse as ritual expression in Cuba and madness in a Moroccan city, the HIV epidemic in South Africa and roadkill in suburban America. Essays alternate with methodological reflections on fundamental problems of writerly heritage, craft, and responsibility in anthropology. Crumpled Paper Boat engages writing as a creative process of encounter, a way of making and unmaking worlds, and a material practice no less participatory and dynamic than fieldwork itself. These talented writers show how inventive, appealing, and intellectually adventurous prose can allow us to enter more profoundly into the lives and worlds of others, breaking with conventional notions of representation and subjectivity. They argue that such experimentation is essential to anthropology’s role in the contemporary world, and one of our most powerful means of engaging it. Contributors. Daniella Gandolfo, Angela Garcia, Tobias Hecht, Michael Jackson, Adrie Kusserow, Stuart McLean, Todd Ramón Ochoa, Anand Pandian, Stefania Pandolfo, Lisa Stevenson, Kathleen StewartA School for Advanced Research Advanced Seminar
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- Prologue -- Introduction: Archipelagos, a Voyage in Writing -- 1. The Ambivalent Archive ANGELA GARCIA -- 2. Writing with Care -- 3. After the Fact: The Question of Fidelity in Ethnographic Writing -- 4. Walking and Writing -- 5. Anthropoetry -- 6. Poetry, Uncertainty, and Opacity -- 7. Taʿbīr: Ethnography of the Imaginal -- 8. Writing through Intercessors -- 9. Desire in Cinema -- 10. Flows and Interruptions, or, So Much for Full Stops -- 11. Denial: A Visit in Four Ethnographic Fictions -- 12. Ethnography and Fiction -- 13. SEA -- 14. Writing Otherwise -- 15. Origami Conjecture for a Bembé -- 16. Ethnographic Excess -- 17. Conversations with a Hunter -- 18. On Writing and Surviving -- 19. A Proper Message -- 20. Fidelity and Invention -- Epilogue -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- CONTRIBUTORS -- INDEX
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
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  • 12
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822372455
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (400 p) , 27 illustrations (incl. 16 page color insert)
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 301.01
    Keywords: Becoming (Philosophy) ; Critical theory ; Ethnology Philosophy ; Ethnosociology ; Anthropology Philosophy ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword. Unfinished -- Introduction. Ethnographic Sensorium -- 1 The Anthropology of Becoming -- 2 Becoming Aggrieved. An Alternative Framework of Care in Black Chicago -- 3 Heaven -- 4 Rebellious Matter. The Poetics of Ritual Space in a Turko-Syrian Border Town -- 5 Witness. Humans, Animals, and the Politics of Becoming -- 6 I Was Cannibalized by an Artist. Adriana Varejão, or Art as Flux -- 7 On Negative Becoming -- 8 Time Machines. The Matter of the Missing in Cyprus -- 9 Horizoning. The Work of Projection in Abrupt Climate Change -- 10 Meantime -- 11 Hereafter -- Afterword. Zen Exercises: Anthropological Discipline and Ethics -- Acknowledgments -- Bibliography -- Contributors -- List of Illustrations -- Index
    Abstract: This original, field-changing collection explores the plasticity and unfinishedness of human subjects and lifeworlds, advancing the conceptual terrain of an anthropology of becoming. People's becomings trouble and exceed ways of knowing and acting, producing new possibilities for research, methodology, and writing. The contributors creatively bridge ethnography and critical theory in a range of worlds on the edge, from war and its aftermath, economic transformation, racial inequality, and gun violence to religiosity, therapeutic markets, animal rights activism, and abrupt environmental change. Defying totalizing analytical schemes, these visionary essays articulate a human science of the uncertain and unknown and restore a sense of movement and possibility to ethics and political practice. Unfinished invites readers to consider the array of affects, ideas, forces, and objects that shape contemporary modes of existence and future horizons, opening new channels for critical thought and creative expression.Contributors. Lucas Bessire, João Biehl, Naisargi N. Dave, Elizabeth A. Davis, Michael M. J. Fischer, Angela Garcia, Peter Locke, Adriana Petryna, Bridget Purcell, Laurence Ralph, Lilia M. Schwarcz
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
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  • 13
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822373087
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (240 p.) , 101 illustrations, incl. 96 in color
    DDC: 307.76096662
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    Keywords: Architecture and anthropology / Liberia / Monrovia ; Architecture / Political aspects / Liberia / Monrovia ; Architecture / Liberia / Monrovia ; Urban anthropology / Liberia / Monrovia ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: In Monrovia Modern Danny Hoffman uses the ruins of four iconic modernist buildings in Monrovia, Liberia, as a way to explore the relationship between the built environment and political imagination. Hoffman shows how the E. J. Roye tower and the Hotel Africa luxury resort, as well as the unfinished Ministry of Defense and Liberia Broadcasting System buildings, transformed during the urban warfare of the 1990s from symbols of the modernist project of nation-building to reminders of the challenges Monrovia's residents face. The transient lives of these buildings' inhabitants, many of whom are ex-combatants, prevent them from making place-based claims to a right to the city and hinder their ability to think of ways to rebuild and repurpose their built environment. Featuring nearly 100 of Hoffman's color photographs, Monrovia Modern is situated at the intersection of photography, architecture, and anthropology, mapping out the possibilities and limits for imagining an urban future in Monrovia and beyond
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  • 14
    ISBN: 9780822373605
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (360 p.) , 46 illustrations
    DDC: 301
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    Keywords: Anthropology / Political aspects ; Cultural policy ; Ethnology / Political aspects ; Museum exhibits / Political aspects ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: The coauthors of this theoretically innovative work explore the relationships among anthropological fieldwork, museum collecting and display, and social governance in the early twentieth century in Australia, Britain, France, New Zealand, and the United States. With case studies ranging from the Musée de l'Homme's 1930s fieldwork missions in French Indo-China to the influence of Franz Boas's culture concept on the development of American museums, the authors illuminate recent debates about postwar forms of multicultural governance, cultural conceptions of difference, and postcolonial policy and practice in museums. Collecting, Ordering, Governing is essential reading for scholars and students of anthropology, museum studies, cultural studies, and indigenous studies as well as museum and heritage professionals
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  • 15
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822372875
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (368 p.)
    DDC: 305.8001
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    Keywords: Ethnology / Methodology ; Ethnology / Philosophy ; Publicity ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
    Abstract: What happens when ethnographers go public via books, opinion papers, media interviews, court testimonies, policy recommendations, or advocacy activities? Calling for a consideration of this public moment as part and parcel of the research process, the contributors to If Truth Be Told explore the challenges, difficulties, and stakes of having ethnographic research encounter various publics, ranging from journalists, legal experts, and policymakers to activist groups, local populations, and other scholars. The experiences they analyze include Didier Fassin’s interventions on police and prison, Gabriella Coleman's multiple roles as intermediary between hackers and journalists, Kelly Gillespie's and Jonathan Benthall's experiences serving as expert witnesses, the impact of Manuela Ivone Cunha's and Vincent Dubois's work on public policies, and the vociferous attacks on the work of Unni Wikan and Nadia Abu El-Haj. With case studies from five continents, this collection signals the global impact of the questions that the publicization of ethnography raises about the public sphere, the role of the academy, and the responsibilities of social scientists.Contributors. Jonathan Benthall, Lucas Bessire, João Biehl, Gabriella Coleman, Manuela Ivone Cunha, Vincent Dubois, Nadia Abu El-Haj, Didier Fassin, Kelly Gillespie, Ghassan Hage, Sherine Hamdy, Federico Neiburg, Unni Wikan
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  • 16
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822373810
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (232 p.) , 9 illustrations
    DDC: 305.8001
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    Keywords: Columbia College Book Awards ; Lionel Trilling Book Award ; Trilling Award Winner ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: In Geontologies Elizabeth A. Povinelli continues her project of mapping the current conditions of late liberalism by offering a bold retheorization of power. Finding Foucauldian biopolitics unable to adequately reveal contemporary mechanisms of power and governance, Povinelli describes a mode of power she calls geontopower, which operates through the regulation of the distinction between Life and Nonlife and the figures of the Desert, the Animist, and the Virus. Geontologies examines this formation of power from the perspective of Indigenous Australian maneuvers against the settler state. And it probes how our contemporary critical languages—anthropogenic climate change, plasticity, new materialism, antinormativity—often unwittingly transform their struggles against geontopower into a deeper entwinement within it. A woman who became a river, a snakelike entity who spawns the fog, plesiosaurus fossils and vast networks of rock weirs: in asking how these different forms of existence refuse incorporation into the vocabularies of Western theory Povinelli provides a revelatory new way to understand a form of power long self-evident in certain regimes of settler late liberalism but now becoming visible much further beyond
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  • 17
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822377436
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XIV, 157 Seiten)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Roitman, Janet L., 1964 - Anti-crisis
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    Keywords: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Krise ; Begriff ; Krise ; Geschichtsphilosophie
    Abstract: Crisis is everywhere: in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, and the Congo; in housing markets, money markets, financial systems, state budgets, and sovereign currencies. In Anti-Crisis, Janet Roitman steps back from the cycle of crisis production to ask not just why we declare so many crises but also what sort of analytical work the concept of crisis enables. What, she asks, are the stakes of crisis? Taking responses to the so-called subprime mortgage crisis of 2007–2008 as her case in point, Roitman engages with the work of thinkers ranging from Reinhart Koselleck to Michael Lewis, and from Thomas Hobbes to Robert Shiller. In the process, she questions the bases for claims to crisis and shows how crisis functions as a narrative device, or how the invocation of crisis in contemporary accounts of the financial meltdown enables particular narratives, raising certain questions while foreclosing others
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction What Is at Stake? -- Chapter 1. Crisis Demands judgment day the moral demand the test -- Chapter 2. Crisis Narratives bubbles houses finance subjects -- Chapter 3. Crisis: Refrain! noncrisis narration the crisis that does not obtain -- Conclusion Dreams -- Notes -- References -- Index
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
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  • 18
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822397533
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (264 p.) , 14 illustrations
    DDC: 305.8914/05357
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    Keywords: East Indians / United Arab Emirates / Dubayy (Emirate) ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Indian communities have existed in the Gulf emirate of Dubai for more than a century. Since the 1970s, workers from South Asia have flooded into the emirate, enabling Dubai's huge construction boom. They now compose its largest noncitizen population. Though many migrant families are middle-class and second-, third-, or even fourth-generation residents, Indians cannot become legal citizens of the United Arab Emirates. Instead, they are all classified as temporary guest workers. In Impossible Citizens, Neha Vora draws on her ethnographic research in Dubai's Indian-dominated downtown to explore how Indians live suspended in a state of permanent temporariness.While their legal status defines them as perpetual outsiders, Indians are integral to the Emirati nation-state and its economy. At the same time, Indians—even those who have established thriving diasporic neighborhoods in the emirate—disavow any interest in formally belonging to Dubai and instead consider India their home. Vora shows how these multiple and conflicting logics of citizenship and belonging contribute to new understandings of contemporary citizenship, migration, and national identity, ones that differ from liberal democratic models and that highlight how Indians, rather than Emiratis, are the quintessential—yet impossible—citizens of Dubai
    URL: Cover
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  • 19
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822390794
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (424 p.) , 38 illustrations
    Series Statement: Experimental futures : technological lives, scientific arts, anthropological voices
    DDC: 301
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    Keywords: Anthropology ; Ethnology ; Interdisciplinary approach to knowledge ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social ; Electronic books
    Abstract: In Anthropological Futures, Michael M. J. Fischer explores the uses of anthropology as a mode of philosophical inquiry, an evolving academic discipline, and a means for explicating the complex and shifting interweaving of human bonds and social interactions on a global level. Through linked essays, which are both speculative and experimental, Fischer seeks to break new ground for anthropology by illuminating the field’s broad analytical capacity and its attentiveness to emergent cultural systems.Fischer is particularly concerned with cultural anthropology’s interactions with science studies, and throughout the book he investigates how emerging knowledge formations in molecular biology, environmental studies, computer science, and bioengineering are transforming some of anthropology’s key concepts including nature, culture, personhood, and the body.-
    Abstract: In an essay on culture, he uses the science studies paradigm of "experimental systems" to consider how the social scientific notion of culture has evolved as an analytical tool since the nineteenth century. Charting anthropology’s role in understanding and analyzing the production of knowledge within the sciences since the 1990s, he highlights anthropology’s aptitude for tracing the transnational collaborations and multisited networks that constitute contemporary scientific practice. Fischer investigates changing ideas about cultural inscription on the human body in a world where genetic engineering, robotics, and cybernetics are constantly redefining our understanding of biology. In the final essay, Fischer turns to Kant’s philosophical anthropology to reassess the object of study for contemporary anthropology and to reassert the field’s primacy for answering the largest questions about human beings, societies, culture, and our interactions with the world around us.-
    Abstract: In Anthropological Futures, Fischer continues to advance what Clifford Geertz, in reviewing Fischer’s earlier book Emergent Forms of Life and the Anthropological Voice, called "a broad new agenda for cultural description and political critique."
    URL: Cover
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  • 20
    ISBN: 9780822389026
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (440 p.) , 25 illustrations
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    Keywords: Citizenship / Germany ; Turks / Germany ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: In Cosmopolitan Anxieties, Ruth Mandel explores Germany’s relation to the more than two million Turkish immigrants and their descendants living within its borders. Based on her two decades of ethnographic research in Berlin, she argues that Germany’s reactions to the postwar Turkish diaspora have been charged, inconsistent, and resonant of past problematic encounters with a Jewish "other." Mandel examines the tensions in Germany between race-based ideologies of blood and belonging on the one hand and ambitions of multicultural tolerance and cosmopolitanism on the other. She does so by juxtaposing the experiences of Turkish immigrants, Jews, and "ethnic Germans" in relation to issues including Islam, Germany’s Nazi past, and its radically altered position as a unified country in the post–Cold War era.Mandel explains that within Germany the popular understanding of what it means to be German is often conflated with citizenship, so that a German citizen of Turkish background can never be a "real German." This conflation of blood and citizenship was dramatically illustrated when, during the 1990s, nearly two million "ethnic Germans" from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union arrived in Germany with a legal and social status far superior to that of "Turks" who had lived in the country for decades. Mandel analyzes how representations of Turkish difference are appropriated or rejected by Turks living in Germany; how subsequent generations of Turkish immigrants are exploring new configurations of identity and citizenship through literature, film, hip-hop, and fashion; and how migrants returning to Turkey find themselves fundamentally changed by their experiences in Germany. She maintains that until difference is accepted as unproblematic, there will continue to be serious tension regarding resident foreigners, despite recurrent attempts to realize a more inclusive and "demotic" cosmopolitan vision of Germany
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  • 21
    ISBN: 9780822387107
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (350 p) , 11 illus
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Keywords: Political anthropology ; Political customs and rites ; Politics and culture ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Anthropology and the Government of ‘‘Natives,’’ a Comparative Approach -- Rationalizing Colonial Domination? Anthropology and Native Policy in French-Ruled Africa -- ‘‘The Good-Hearted Portuguese People’’: Anthropology of Nation, Anthropology of Empire -- Vichy France and the End of Scientific Folklore (1937–1954) -- From Nation to Empire: War and National Character Studies in the United States -- Anthropology at the End of Empire: The Rise and Fall of the Colonial Social Sciences Research Council, 1944–1962 -- Bordering on Anthropology: Dialectics of a National Tradition in Mexico -- Indigenism in Brazil: The International Migration of State Policies -- The Anthropologist as Expert: Brazilian Ethnology between Indianism and Indigenism -- Anthropology, Development, and Nongovernmental Organizations in Latin America -- The Ethnologist and the Architect: A Postcolonial Experiment in the French Pacific -- ‘‘Today We Have Naming of Parts’’: The Work of Anthropologists in Southern Africa -- References -- Contributors -- Index
    Abstract: Empires, Nations, and Natives is a groundbreaking comparative analysis of the interplay between the practice of anthropology and the politics of empires and nation-states in the colonial and postcolonial worlds. It brings together essays that demonstrate how the production of social-science knowledge about the “other” has been inextricably linked to the crafting of government policies. Subverting established boundaries between national and imperial anthropologies, the contributors explore the role of anthropology in the shifting categorizations of race in southern Africa, the identification of Indians in Brazil, the implementation of development plans in Africa and Latin America, the construction of Mexican and Portuguese nationalism, the genesis of “national character” studies in the United States during World War II, the modernizing efforts of the French colonial administration in Africa, and postcolonial architecture.The contributors—social and cultural anthropologists from the Americas and Europe—report on both historical and contemporary processes. Moving beyond controversies that cast the relationship between scholarship and politics in binary terms of complicity or autonomy, they bring into focus a dynamic process in which states, anthropological knowledge, and population groups themselves are mutually constructed. Such a reflexive endeavor is an essential contribution to a critical anthropological understanding of a changing world.Contributors: Alban Bensa, Marcio Goldman, Adam Kuper, Benoît de L’Estoile, Claudio Lomnitz, David Mills, Federico Neiburg, João Pacheco de Oliveira, Jorge Pantaleón, Omar Ribeiro Thomaz, Lygia Sigaud, Antonio Carlos de Souza Lima, Florence Weber
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
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  • 22
    ISBN: 9780822383222
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (530 p) , 11 b&w photos, 1 table, 6 maps, 15 figures
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Keywords: Kinship ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- INTRODUCTION Relative Values: Reconfiguring Kinship Studies -- PART I Substantial-Codings: From Blood to Hypertext -- 1. Substantivism, Antisubstantivism, and Anti-antisubstantivism -- 2. The Ethnography of Creation: Lewis Henry Morgan and the American Beaver -- 3. Making Kinship, with an Old Reproductive Technology -- 4. Kinship in Hypertext: Transubstantiating Fatherhood and Information Flow in Artificial Life -- PART II Kinship Negotiations: What’s Biology Not/Got to Do with It -- 5. Kinship, Controversy, and the Sharing of Substance: The Race/ Class Politics of Blood Transfusion -- 6. Strategic Naturalizing: Kinship in an Infertility Clinic -- 7. Self-Conscious Kinship: Some Contested Values in Norwegian Transnational Adoption -- 8. Practicing Kinship in Rural North China -- 9. The Shift in Kinship Studies in France: The Case of Grandparenting -- PART III Nature, Culture, and the Properties of Kinship -- 10. The Economies in Kinship and the Paternity of Culture: Origin Stories in Kinship Theory -- 11. Biologization Revisited: Kinship Theory in the Context of the New Biologies -- PART IV ’R’ Genes Us? The Uses of Gene/alogies -- 12. Blood/Kinship, Governmentality, and Cultures of Order in Colonial Africa -- 13. ‘‘We’re Going to Tell These People Who They Really Are’’: Science and Relatedness -- 14. Genealogical Dis-Ease: Where Hereditary Abnormality, Biomedical Explanation, and Family Responsibility Meet -- PART V Ambivalence and Violence at the Heart of Kinship -- 15. Ambivalence in Kinship since the 1940s -- 16. Cutting the Ties That Bind: The Sacrifice of Abraham and Patriarchal Kinship -- 17. To Forget Their Tongue, Their Name, and Their Whole Relation: Captivity, Extra-Tribal Adoption, and the Indian Child Welfare Act -- Contributors -- Index
    Abstract: The essays in Relative Values draw on new work in anthropology, science studies, gender theory, critical race studies, and postmodernism to offer a radical revisioning of kinship and kinship theory. Through a combination of vivid case studies and trenchant theoretical essays, the contributors—a group of internationally recognized scholars—examine both the history of kinship theory and its future, at once raising questions that have long occupied a central place within the discipline of anthropology and moving beyond them.Ideas about kinship are vital not only to understanding but also to forming many of the practices and innovations of contemporary society. How do the cultural logics of contemporary biopolitics, commodification, and globalization intersect with kinship practices and theories? In what ways do kinship analogies inform scientific and clinical practices; and what happens to kinship when it is created in such unfamiliar sites as biogenetic labs, new reproductive technology clinics, and the computers of artificial life scientists? How does kinship constitute—and get constituted by—the relations of power that draw lines of hierarchy and equality, exclusion and inclusion, ambivalence and violence? The contributors assess the implications for kinship of such phenomena as blood transfusions, adoption across national borders, genetic support groups, photography, and the new reproductive technologies while ranging from rural China to mid-century Africa to contemporary Norway and the United States. Addressing these and other timely issues, Relative Values injects new life into one of anthropology's most important disciplinary traditions.Posing these and other timely questions, Relative Values injects an important interdisciplinary curiosity into one of anthropology’s most important disciplinary traditions.Contributors. Mary Bouquet, Janet Carsten, Charis Thompson Cussins, Carol Delaney, Gillian Feeley-Harnik, Sarah Franklin, Deborah Heath, Stefan Helmreich, Signe Howell, Jonathan Marks, Susan McKinnon, Michael G. Peletz, Rayna Rapp, Martine Segalen, Pauline Turner Strong, Melbourne Tapper, Karen-Sue Taussig, Kath Weston, Yunxiang Yan
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
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  • 23
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Durham : Duke University Press
    ISBN: 9780822380214
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (208 p)
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Keywords: Africans Ethnic identity ; Anthropology ; Ethnology History ; SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Dangerous Supplements -- Chapter 1 ‘‘Race,’’ Rationality, and the Pedagogical Imperative -- Chapter 2 Dangerous Liaisons? Frustrated Radicals, Master Professionals -- Chapter 3 Colonial Self-Fashioning and the Production of History -- Coda -- Bibliography -- Index
    Abstract: Subject to Colonialism provides a much needed revisionist perspective on the way twentieth-century Africa is viewed and analyzed among scholars. Employing literary, historical, and anthropological techniques, Gaurav Desai attempts to generate a new understanding of issues that permeate discussions of Africa by disrupting the centrality of postcolonial texts and focusing instead on the cultural and intellectual production of colonial Africans. In particular, Desai calls for a reevaluation of the “colonial library”—that set of representations and texts that have collectively “invented” Africa as a locus of difference and alterity.Presenting colonialism not as a singular, monolithic structure but rather as a practice frought with contradictions and tensions, Desai works to historicize the foundation of postcolonialism by decentering both canonical texts and privileged categories of analysis such as race, capitalism, empire, and nation. To achieve this, he focuses on texts that construct or reform—rather than merely reflect—colonialism, placing explicit emphasis on processes, performances, and the practices of everyday life. Reading these texts not merely for the content of their assertions but also for how they were created and received, Desai looks at works such as Jomo Kenyatta’s ethnography of the Gikuyu and Akiga Sai’s history of the Tiv and makes a particular plea for the canonical recuperation of African women’s writing.Scholars in African history, literature, and philosophy, postcolonial studies, literary criticism, and anthropology will welcome publication of this book
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
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