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El. knyga: One World Anthropology and Beyond: A Multidisciplinary Engagement with the Work of Tim Ingold

Edited by (University of Western Australia, Australia), Edited by

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This volume offers a multidisciplinary engagement with the work of Tim Ingold. Involved in a critical long-term exploration of the relationships between human beings, organisms, and their environment, Ingold has become one of the most influential, innovative, and prolific writers in anthropology in recent decades. His work transcends established academic and disciplinary boundaries and his thinking continues to have a significant impact on numerous areas of research and other intellectual and artistic spheres. The contributions to this book are drawn from several fields, including social anthropology, archaeology, rock art studies, philosophy, and science and technology studies. The chapters critically engage with Ingold’s approaches and ideas in relation to a variety of case studies that include the exploration of Australian rock art, electricity in Pakistan, Spanish farmhouses and sensory dimensions of educational practices. Emphasising the importance of dialogue and debate, there is also a response to the contributions by Tim Ingold himself. The volume will appeal to a wide range of audiences and provide new avenues of theoretically informed anthropological exploration into the many realities and expressions of human life.



This volume offers a multidisciplinary engagement with the work of Tim Ingold.

Part I Introduction

Tim Ingold biographical and research overview

Martin Porr, Niels Weidtmann, and Tim Ingold

1 Being alive and educating attention: The persistent value of the work of
Tim Ingold

Martin Porr and Niels Weidtmann

Part II Knowing, perceiving, and attending

2 Introduction: Knowing, perceiving, and attending

Niels Weidtmann and Martin Porr

3 Anthropology with Tim Ingold and friends

Stephanie Bunn

4 Artworks at a threshold: Thinking with Tim Ingold about art gallery
technicians

Laura Harris

5 In the slipstream of participation: Attention and intention in
anthropological fieldwork

Anna Bloom-Christen

6 Historicising creativity: An interdisciplinary perspective between the
social and natural sciences

Dylan Gaffney and Leor Zmigrod

Part III Anthropology and/as attention

7 Introduction: Anthropology and/as attention

Niels Weidtmann and Martin Porr

8 Experiences from within: Contributions of outdoor education to
anthropology

Melanie Greiner

9 Decolonising anthropology and/as education?

Antony Pattathu

Part IV The life of lines, dwelling and growing

10 Introduction: The life of lines, dwelling and growing

Martin Porr and Niels Weidtmann

11 Making (of) ecology. Philosophical perspectives on Tim Ingold

Ralf Gisinger

12 Making and growing: The lives and deaths of a tree and a house in the
Spanish dehesa

Maike Melles

13 Living along infrastructural lines: Following electricity in Hunza

Quirin Rieder

Part V Art beyond the image

14 Introduction: Art beyond the image

Martin Porr and Niels Weidtmann

15 Dwelling with Siberian rock art

Irina A. Ponomareva

16 Rock art conservation and living heritage: Performance and the
transformation of paintings in rock art

Ana Paula Motta

17 Many ways to see yams: An ecological analysis of Yam Figures in the
Aboriginal rock art of Balanggarra Country, Northeast Kimberley, Western
Australia

Emily Grey and Balanggarra Aboriginal Corporation

18 Ontological reversals, correspondences, and archaeological arts of
noticing

Benjamin Alberti

Part VI Conclusion

19 Let the world teach! Some closing reflections

Tim Ingold
Martin Porr is Associate Professor of Archaeology at the University of Western Australia.

Niels Weidtmann, philosophy, is Director of the College of Fellows Center for Interdisciplinary and Intercultural Studies at Eberhard-Karls Universität Tübingen, Germany.