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Anthropology and Nostalgia [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 244 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 499 g, Bibliography; Index; 12 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2014
  • Leidėjas: Berghahn Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782384537
  • ISBN-13: 9781782384533
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 244 pages, aukštis x plotis: 229x152 mm, weight: 499 g, Bibliography; Index; 12 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2014
  • Leidėjas: Berghahn Books
  • ISBN-10: 1782384537
  • ISBN-13: 9781782384533
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In this edited collection of essays, the authors take nostalgia, especially cultural nostalgia, as a serious concept for anthropological research and thought. They clarify the concept, discuss the forms nostalgia takes, its psychological triggers and functions. One writes about "The Bunker" in Lithuania, which is a socialist museum that allows visitors to experience conditions of life under Soviet communism. Others have a more general scope, describing the realitiies of cultural nostalgia in interactions, and through texts, objects and technologies. A certain type of nostalgia, one author finds, is an element of remaking cultural identity under the pressure of change, exemplified here in an account of displaced Turkish Cypriots. And nostalgia "reveals relationships among the past, present and future." Because anthropological study has been from the beginning largely based in colonialism, the field has been about investigating the fragility and dissolution of non-white societies. This gives a natural bias for nostalgia on the part of anthropologists, as discussed in another essay. Other authors describe aspects of cultural nostalgia in Hungary, East Germany and Spain. Annotation ©2015 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Recenzijos

this edited volume remains an important contribution to the increasing number of anthropologists who encounter affective remembrances of distant pasts. Particularly valuable are its methodological focus on the concrete discourses, materialities, social interactions, texts, and technologies through which nostalgia manifests. Scholars who work on memory, politics, affect, identity, and material culture will all find many valuable and challenging insights throughout the book. · Anthropos





[ This volume] illustrates that nostalgia is an undeniable part of modern (if not general human) experience and that anthropology has a great deal to offer in understanding and critiquing its diverse forms, practices, and social and political implications. · Anthropology Review Database





Nostalgia is a central characteristic of our age. Gathering together ethnographic cases from around the world, this timely and innovative volume investigates the diversity of nostalgic forms today, as well as the historic role nostalgia plays in the development of anthropology. A must read for all scholars interested in the contemporary politics of memory and heritage. · Lynn Meskell, Stanford University





A brilliant foray into the field of nostalgia studies, which pluralizes and de-familiarizes the terms standard meaning. Nostalgia emerges from these essays not just as a backward glance but also as a future-oriented, contemporary critique, strategic, materialist, performative and as a defining feature not only of modernity but also of anthropology and social theory more broadly. Sémart theorizing rooted in deep ethnography makes this a masterful contribution. · Charles Piot, Duke University





Nostalgia permeates the anthropological profession, both as the often evanescent object of its investigation of pasts recalled and recalibrated, and as a characteristic of anthropologists sometimes rueful musings about their own work. Ranging across a variety of ethnographic settings, these well-crafted and mutually illuminating essays illustrate both the ambiguity and the utility of what has become an important concept for linking the recurrent preoccupations of anthropological research with the concerns of several other disciplines. · Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University





This volume risks being a future trend-setter in the anthropological study of memory and temporality, as it captures a historical moment of growing interest (in and outside the academy) regarding nostalgia as a social and political phenomenon, while simultaneously disentangling the multiple understandings and instrumentalisations that the concept entails · Ruy Llera Blanes, University of Bergen





The ideas are original, noteworthy, and of value not just to anthropologists, but also psychologists, sociologists and others who are concerned with memory and the social world. Drawing on the experiences of people in a number of countries inevitably provides a breadth of outlooks, and this is to be applauded. · Nigel Hunt, University of Nottingham

List of Illustrations
vii
Acknowledgements viii
Introduction: Anthropology of Nostalgia -- Anthropology as Nostalgia 1(16)
Olivia Ange
David Berliner
1 Are Anthropologists Nostalgist?
17(18)
David Berliner
2 Missing Socialism Again? The Malaise of Nostalgia in Post-Soviet Lithuania
35(26)
Gediminas Lankauskas
3 The Politics of Nostalgia in the Aftermath of Socialism's Collapse: A Case for Comparative Analysis
61(35)
Maya Nadkarni
Olga Shevchenko
4 Why Post-imperial Trumps Post-socialist: Crying Back the National Past in Hungary
96(27)
Chris Hann
5 Consuming Communism: Material Cultures of Nostalgia in Former East Germany
123(16)
Jonathan Bach
6 The Key from (to) Sefarad: Nostalgia for a Lost Country
139(16)
Joseph Josy Levy
Inaki Olazabal
7 Nostalgia and the Discovery of Loss: Essentializing the Turkish Cypriot Past
155(23)
Rebecca Bryant
8 Social and Economic Performativity of Nostalgic Narratives in Andean Barter Fairs
178(20)
Olivia Ange
9 The Withering of Left-Wing Nostalgia?
198(15)
Petra Rethmann
Afterword: On Anthropology's Nostalgia -- Looking Back/Seeing Ahead 213(12)
William Cunningham Bissell
Notes on Contributors 225(4)
Index 229
After being a researcher at the University of Oxford and at Musée du Quai Branly, Olivia Angé is now a Marie Curie European Fellow at the Sociology of Development and Change Group at Wageningen University. Her fieldwork in the Andes mainly focuses on barter, ritual and cultural transmission.