2,366 research outputs found
The impact of capital-intensive agriculture on peasant social structure : a case study
Cover title"June 1956."At head of title: Economic Development Program"#76"--handwritten on cover"Paper delivered at the annual meeting of the Society for Applied Anthropology; summary of a larger CENIS study by Dr. Geertz, The social context of economic change; an Indonesian case study, C/56-18.
The social context of economic change : an Indonesian case study
Cover title"July 1956."Copy from MIT Center for International Studies has changed series numbering on t.p. from E/56-18 to C/56-18. -- Originally issued with E/56-18 series numbering"Economic development program."Includes bibliographical reference
O Selvagem Cerebral: sobre a obra de Claude LĂ©vi-Strauss
.TRADUĂĂO: ANTONIO MAURĂCIO DIAS DA COSTA*REVISĂO DA TRADUĂĂO: JOHN C. DAWSE
La description dense
Le cĂ©lĂšbre essai de C. Geertz qui sert dâintroduction Ă son Interpretation of Cultures (1973) a constituĂ© pour toute une gĂ©nĂ©ration dâanthropologues un vĂ©ritable manifeste de lâanthropologie « interprĂ©tative » et un tournant critique majeur pour la discipline. Or, alors que la quasi-totalitĂ© de lâĆuvre de Geertz est dĂ©sormais disponible en français, ce texte fondamental nâavait toujours pas Ă©tĂ© traduit. Au-delĂ dâune notion â la description dense â dont la fĂ©conditĂ© a dĂ©passĂ© les limites de lâanthropologie, et de plusieurs thĂšmes qui sont devenus des lieux communs du discours anthropologique postmoderniste, cette traduction nous invite Ă redĂ©couvrir un texte qui affronte, dans leur foisonnement, maintes questions que soulĂšve la pratique actuelle de lâanthropologie.Thick Description. Towards an Interpretive Theory of Culture. C. Geertzâs famous essay, which is an introduction to his Interpretation of Cultures (1973), was considered by a whole generation of anthropologists as a real manifesto of « interpretive » anthropology and a turning point for the discipline. While nearly all of Geertzâs works are available in French, this fundamental text had not been translated until today. This text should not be confined to a notion â thick description â whose fruitfulness certainly bypassed the boundaries of anthropology, nor to some important themes which subsequently became common places for post-modernist anthropological discourse. Indeed, it confronts numerous complex questions raised by current anthropological practice
The development of the Javanese economy : a socio-cultural approach
"April 1956."At head of title: Economic Development Program"#75"--handwritten on coverIncludes bibliographical references (leaves 109-130
Bots, Seeds and People: Web Archives as Infrastructure
The field of web archiving provides a unique mix of human and automated
agents collaborating to achieve the preservation of the web. Centuries old
theories of archival appraisal are being transplanted into the sociotechnical
environment of the World Wide Web with varying degrees of success. The work of
the archivist and bots in contact with the material of the web present a
distinctive and understudied CSCW shaped problem. To investigate this space we
conducted semi-structured interviews with archivists and technologists who were
directly involved in the selection of content from the web for archives. These
semi-structured interviews identified thematic areas that inform the appraisal
process in web archives, some of which are encoded in heuristics and
algorithms. Making the infrastructure of web archives legible to the archivist,
the automated agents and the future researcher is presented as a challenge to
the CSCW and archival community
Mapping a Cultural Studies of Law
In this chapter I briefly map the terrain of a set of scholarly approaches that could be called a cultural analysis of law. A cultural analysis or a cultural studies of law generally starts with the dual premise that law is a set of meaning-making practices that exists within and is the product of a particular culture and that the culture is a set of meaning-making practices that exists within and is the product of a particular set of laws.
In this chapter I unpack and elaborate this foundational idea by exploring three routes along which a cultural analysis of law has been productively pursued: (1) narration, (2) identity, and (3) visuality. Narration is meant to embody a number of different approaches that apply a literary sensibility and critique to the language, interpretation, and rhetoric of law, legal arguments, and legal representations. It also seeks to capture the ways that law and representations of law (in novels, films, and other cultural artifacts) create certain kinds of enduring social narratives and tropes and perhaps teach normative lessons. Identity is a route paved by a robust scholarship that examines the role of law in developing, negotiating, policing, and enforcing certain kinds of individual and collective identities, including racial, ethnic, sexual, national and subnational identities that have been salient at different times. Lastly, I explore more briefly the smaller path of visuality, a recent effort to critically engage with the prominent portrayals of law and legal institutions in our pervasively visual culture as well as with the increasing use of visual arguments and iconography within law and legal practice
Sacred communities: contestations and connections
This article discusses a project whose purpose was to review existing qualitative and quantitative data from two separate studies to provide new insights about everyday religion and belonging. Researchers engaged in knowledge exchange and dialogue with new and former research participants, with other researchers involved in similar research, and with wider academic networks beyond the core disciplines represented here, principally anthropology and geography. Key concluding themes related to the ambivalent nature of âfaithâ, connections over place and time, and the contested nature of community. Implicit in terms like âfaithâ, âcommunityâ, and âlife courseâ are larger interwoven narratives of space, time, place, corporeality, and emotion. The authors found that understanding how places, communities, and faiths differ and intersect requires an understanding of social relatedness and boundaries
A Case of Cultural Misunderstanding: French Anthropology in a comparative perspective
This paper offers a study of French anthropological tradition in a comparative perspective. It focuses on French anthropologistsâ writing practices and, in particular, on a strikingly recurrent phenomenon: that French ethnographers, in addition to their scholarly work, often write a âsecond book,â a literary account of their experience in the field. The study of the divide between these two books allows for a comparison with other national anthropological traditions, particularly the American one. It sheds light on some difficulties in cultural and intellectual translation between national traditions in social sciences
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