Atjaunināt sīkdatņu piekrišanu

Alter-Politics: Critical Anthropology and the Radical Imagination [Mīkstie vāki]

3.69/5 (16 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 212x136x14 mm, weight: 310 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Feb-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Academic Monographs
  • ISBN-10: 0522867383
  • ISBN-13: 9780522867381
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 232 pages, height x width x depth: 212x136x14 mm, weight: 310 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Feb-2015
  • Izdevniecība: Academic Monographs
  • ISBN-10: 0522867383
  • ISBN-13: 9780522867381
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This book is a contribution to a long history of critical writing against an increasingly destructive global order marked by an excessive instrumentalisation, exploitation and degradation of the human and non-human environment, and ridden with unacceptable, but also, importantly, avoidable, forms of inequality, injustice and marginalisation.

Alter-Politics is concerned with the way anthropological critical writing in particular aims to weave oppositional concerns (anti-politics) with a search for alternatives (alter-politics): alternative economies, alternative modes of inhabiting and relating to the earth, alternative modes of thinking and experiencing otherness.

If Alter-Politics privileges alter-politics over oppositional politics, it is not because, as is made clear, the 'alter' moment is more important than the 'anti'. It is because a concern for alter-politics has been less prevalent. The question of 'political passion' is crucial in this conception of the alter-political. For the book argues that it is because radical political passion has been mostly directed towards anti-politics that it has come to dominate over alter-politics. This does not simply mean that political passion needs to be equally directed towards alter-politics. It also means that this passion itself needs to be a radically different kind of political passion once so directed. It is this 'alter-political passion' that Hage strives to create a space for throughout Alter-Politics.
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(12)
Part I
1 The globalisation of the late colonial settler condition
13(20)
2 On stuckedness: The critique of crisis and the crisis of critique
33(16)
Part II
3 Critical anthropological thought and the radical political imaginary today
49(30)
4 The Arab social sciences and the two critical traditions
79(12)
Part III
5 On ethnography and political emotions: Hating Israel in the field
91(29)
6 Alter-political rationality and anti-political emotions: The case of Fanon
120(25)
Part IV
7 On narcissistic victimhood
145(20)
Appendix to chapter 7: I don't write poems but, in any case, poems are not poems
164(1)
8 The unoccupied
165(8)
9 Recalling anti-racism: Towards a critical anthropology of exterminability
173(27)
Appendix to chapter 9: Against colonial rubbishing
193(7)
10 Dwelling in the reality of utopian thought
200(11)
11 Other belongings
211(10)
Notes 221(6)
Bibliography 227(8)
Index 235
Ghassan Hage is professor of anthropology and social theory at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He has held many international visiting professorships including at Harvard, at The Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris, France, The University of Copenhagen and The American University of Beirut, Lebannon. He works in the areas of comparative nationalism, racism and multiculturalism. He is the author of many publications in this domain; most known among them is White Nation: Fantasies of White Supremacy in a Multicultural Society (Routledge 2000). He also works in social theory with a particular interest in the work of Pierre Bourdieu.