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E-grāmata: Smokefree: A Social, Moral and Political Atmosphere

(Australian National University)
  • Formāts: 216 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-May-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000183085
  • Formāts - PDF+DRM
  • Cena: 47,58 €*
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  • Formāts: 216 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-May-2020
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000183085

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Although tobacco is a legal substance, many governments around the world have introduced legislation to restrict smoking and access to tobacco products.Smokefree critically examines these changes, from the increasing numbers of places being designated as 'smokefree' to changes in cigarette packaging and the portrayal of smoking in popular culture.

Unlike existing texts, this book neither advances a public health agenda nor condemns the erosion of individual rights. Instead, Simone Dennis takes a classical anthropological approach to present the first agenda-free, full-length study of smoking. Observing and analysing smoking practices and environments, she investigates how the social, moral, political and legal atmosphere of 'smokefree' came into being and examines the ideas about smoke, air, the senses, space, and time which underlie it. Looking at the impact on public space and individuals, she reveals broader findings about the relationship between the state, agents, and what is seen to constitute 'the public'.

Enriched with ethnographic vignettes from the author's ten years of fieldwork in Australia,Smokefree is a challenging, important book which demands to be read and discussed by anyone with an interest in anthropology, sociology, political science, human geography, and public health.

Recenzijas

"Smokefree is a clever exploration of concepts of materiality, embodiment and sensory experience, and boundary crossing, as well as a challenge to apply our methods thoroughly and neutrally even on behaviors of which we disapprove. - Anthropology Review Database - Jack David Eller

Anthropologist Dennis challenges the pervasive anti-smoking agenda of most of anthropology and social science research. Even research that appears to look at smoking from the (recalcitrant) smokers point of view in reality is often doing so in service of more finely tailored anti-smoking messages. Dennis uncovers the complexity of smoking in, for example, how smokers experience the trail of smoke as it emanates from their lit cigarettes. Some people tell Dennis that they smoke because of smokings now demonized state. Dennis discovers that anti-smoking messages, such as pregnant women smokers giving birth to low weight babies, can be seen as an advantage to women who would like to give birth to small babies. People told Dennis how they mentally countered the graphic public health messages found throughout Australia. Many of Denniss findings come from casual conversations with smokers in Australia as they were smoking. Some of the time Dennis was herself smoking, which probably announced to the smoker that Dennis was without judgments. The books illustrations and ethnographic content from smokers is effective. Its many discussions of anthropological and philosophical theories make this book best suited to graduate students and scholars. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. - CHOICE"

Papildus informācija

This cutting-edge study explores the impact of contemporary smokefree policies and the effects both on the wider public space and the space occupied by the individual smoker.
List of Figures
viii
Foreword ix
Acknowledgements xi
Acknowledgements of persons xii
Orienting notes: Ethnographic vignettes from a fascinating atmosphere
1(1)
A fascinating atmosphere
1(1)
Ethnographic vignettes
2(5)
The strength (or weakness) of vignettes
7(1)
A note on Australian specificity and broader relevance
8(3)
Introduction: There's something in the air
11(1)
Examining smoking in the era of smokefree: Public health and anthropology
11(1)
The anthropology of smoking (a smokefree anthropology)
12(4)
Anthropology's smoker
16(1)
A new approach to smoking and smokefree
17(2)
An argument for inchoateness
19(3)
The structure
22(5)
PART ONE The lay of the smokefree land
27(68)
1 The difference between tobacco and tomatoes
29(19)
Introduction
29(2)
On `atmospheres'
31(2)
Some thoughts on an uninsurable monkey
33(3)
Public health interventions and the construction of the smoker
36(3)
The Benson and Hedges World Series Cricket, 1988
39(3)
Smokefree places
42(1)
The nuances of public place legislation
43(4)
Legislating the air
47(1)
2 Oppositionary pairings and ruinous smoke
48(22)
Introduction
48(1)
Oppositionary pair: Right and wrong
48(2)
Oppositionary pair: Public health and tobacco companies
50(3)
Oppositionary pair: A long life or an untimely death
53(7)
Oppositionary pair: The time of smoking and the time free of smoking
60(7)
Oppositionary pair: Two spatial states
67(3)
3 Reimagining the smoker
70(25)
Introduction
70(2)
The smoker, doubly constructed
72(6)
Public health's rational agent
78(4)
Anthropological reformulation of the smoker?
82(4)
Michelle the rational smoker
86(2)
Michelle, reanalysed
88(2)
Putting things that are meant to be held apart, together: The internal inconsistency of smoking
90(3)
Come off the veranda
93(2)
PART TWO First, second, third and fourth hand smoke
95(74)
4 Breathing in smoke(free), firsthand
97(17)
Introduction
97(2)
The theoretical backgroundedness of the air itself
99(2)
Air as agent
101(3)
Explicating the (firsthand) air for the ignorant agent
104(5)
Take a big breath in
109(5)
5 Miasmatic exhalation: Breathing out (secondhand)
114(19)
Introduction
114(1)
Explicating the secondhand air
115(3)
The nose knows danger
118(2)
Jennifer, defender of the air
120(2)
Public air
122(2)
An illness-inducing stench: Cancer is catching
124(3)
There is difference in the air
127(1)
Colonial anthropology: Eradicating smoke and mosquitoes
128(2)
Protecting the infinite and pure air
130(3)
6 Abject thirdhand smoke
133(18)
Introduction
133(2)
Thirdhand smoke
135(2)
`Mobile tobacco contamination packages'
137(1)
Smell and the thirdhand trickster
138(6)
Touch: How to deal with witches in the family
144(2)
The air has a history
146(2)
The second law of thermodynamics
148(3)
7 Fourthhand smoke: Going to Flavor Country
151(18)
Introduction
151(1)
Explicating the air in cigarette advertising
152(1)
Come on, come to Flavor Country
152(3)
Small t taste
155(1)
Capital T taste
156(1)
Olive Brown is Not classy
157(3)
All flights to Flavor Country have been grounded
160(1)
The bitter taste of a gangrenous foot
161(2)
Smoking to remember the air
163(1)
Come breathe on me, honey
164(2)
The rational agent and the travel agent
166(3)
Conclusion 169(4)
Notes 173(6)
References 179(14)
Index 193
Simone Dennis is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.