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El. knyga: British Subjects: An Anthropology of Britain

Edited by (University of St Andrews, UK)
  • Formatas: 354 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2020
  • Leidėjas: Berg Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000180596
  • Formatas: 354 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-May-2020
  • Leidėjas: Berg Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000180596

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The anthropology of Britain is hotly debated. What does it mean to live in Britain and to be 'British', and is an anthropology of Britain even a legitimate undertaking? British Subjects presents a forthright voice in this debate. Key anthropological concerns such as community, rationality, aesthetics, the body, power, work and leisure, nationalism and transnationalism are found reflected in the lives of a wide range of British 'subjects'--from farmers to dancers, children to retired miners, new-agers to entrepreneurs.

In disputing traditional claims that anthropology 'at home' and 'of one's own' is misconceived, unnecessary or unperceptive, this book clearly establishes that an anthropology of Britain can set excellent standards of subtle ethnography and complex analysis.

Providing a nuanced appreciation of the intricacies of British society, this book shows how the anthropological study of Britain can offer an enlightening paradigm for the study of individual lives.

Recenzijos

'With the publication of 'British Subjects' the recent work which has been done on the Anthropology of Britain will at last receive the recognition it has long deserved. Nigel Rapport has brought together a number of eminent scholars who have already made substantial contributions to our anthropological understanding of contemporary British society. In specially written chapters deriving directly from their fieldwork they demonstrate how anthropological research can throw light not only on small communities and interest groups, but on institutions such as primary education and professional performing companies, as well as on cultural domains such as the nature of social knowledge and the pursuit of leisure and entertainment. Those who associate anthropology only with an interest in simple societies in remote corners of the globe are in for a pleasant intellectual surprise. Those who have long been aware that anthropology is as much interested in 'us' as in 'them' will find welcome This book will be a landmark in the history of the discipline. It is formidable in a host of ways: in the range of scale and range of approaches, in the subtlety and richness of its observations, in the issues it develops and by its critical acuity with regard to the selective tendencies of certain anthropologists in their study of minorities. L'Homme

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Also available in paperback, 9781859735466 GBP17.99 (March, 2002)
List of Contributors
ix
Part I: Introduction
`Best of British!': An Introduction to the Anthropology of Britain
3(24)
Nigel Rapport
Part II: Nationalism, Contestation and the Performance of Tradition
Introduction to Part II
27(4)
Nigel Rapport
Subject Positions and `Real Royalists': Monarchy and Vernacular Civil Religion in Great Britain
31(18)
Anne Rowbottom
National Day: Achieving Collective Identity on the Isle of Man
49(18)
Susan Lewis
Aesthetics at the Ballet: Looking at `National' Style, Body and Clothing in the London Dance World
67(22)
Helena Wulff
Part III: Strategies of Modernity: Heritage, Leisure, Dissociation
Introduction to Part III
87(2)
Nigel Rapport
On `Old Things': The Fetishization of Past Everyday Life
89(18)
Sharon Macdonald
Leisure and Change in a Post-Mining Mining Town
107(14)
Andrew Dawson
Dissociation, Social Technology and the Spiritual Domain
121(22)
Tanya Luhrmann
Part IV: The Appropriation of Discourse
Introduction to Part IV
141(2)
Nigel Rapport
The English Child: Toward a Cultural Politics of Childhood Identities
143(20)
Allison James
Bits and Bytes of Information
163(18)
Jeanette Edwards
Culture in a Network: Dykes, Webs and Women in London and Manchester
181(28)
Sarah Green
Part V: Methodologies and Ethnomethodologies
Introduction to Part V
205(4)
Nigel Rapport
Interviews as Ethnography? Disembodied Social Interaction in Britain
209(14)
Jenny Hockey
Entering Secure Psychiatric Settings
223(16)
Christine Brown
Cultural Values and Social Organization in Wales: Is Ethnicity the Locus of Culture?
239(24)
Carol Trosset
Douglas Caulkins
Part VI: The Making (and Unmaking) of Community: Ethnicity, Religiosity, Locality
Introduction to Part VI
259(4)
Nigel Rapport
Armenian and Other Diasporas: Trying to Reconcile the Irreconcilable
263(18)
Vered Amit
Both Independent and Interconnected Voices: Bakhtin among the Quakers
281(18)
Peter Collins
The Body of the Village Community: Between Reverend Parkington in Wanet and Mr Beebe in A Room with a View
299(32)
Nigel Rapport
Part VII: Epilogue
The `Best of British' - with More to Come...
323(8)
Anthony P. Cohen
Index 331
Nigel Rapport Professor of Anthropological and Philosophical Studies,University of St. Andrews