Jul 22, 2013 - Fikih Jurnalistik: Etika and Kebebasan Pers Menurut Islam [Journalistic Law: Press Freedom and. Ethics According to Islam]. Jakarta: Pustaka Al-Kautsar. Austin JL. 1962. How to Do Things with Words. Oxford, UK: Clarendon. Bakhtin MM, H
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Don’t grieve. Anything you lose comes round in another form. Rumi
Idea Transcript
The 2017 Sociological Review Monograph Title: Reconfiguring the Anthropology of Britain: Ethnographic, Theoretical and Interdisciplinary Perspectives Editors: Dr Cathrine Degnen (School of Geography, Politics & Sociology, Newcastle University) Dr Katharine Tyler (Department of Sociology, Philosophy & Anthropology, University of Exeter) Table of Contents: Introduction: ‘Bringing Britain into being: sociology, anthropology and British lives’ Cathrine Degnen and Katharine Tyler Preface: ‘Studying Britain: a British sociologist’s view’ Steph Lawler Preface: ‘Barefoot in Britain – yet again: on multiple identities, intersection(ality) and marginality’ Pnina Werbner Chapter 1: ‘Amongst the disciplines: anthropology, sociology, intersection, and intersectionality’ Cathrine Degnen and Katharine Tyler Chapter 2: ‘Relocating the British subject: ethnographic encounters with identity politics and nationalism during the 2014 Scottish independence referendum’ Alexander Smith Chapter 3: ‘“We don’t want to be sent back and forth all the time”: Migration studies and an anthropology of Britain beyond the British Isles’ Laura Jeffery Chapter 4: ‘Social class and the cultural turn: anthropology, sociology and the post-industrial politics of 21st century Britain’ Gillian Evans Chapter 5: ‘Zombie democracy: apathy, personhood and the anthropology of actually existing politics’ Insa Koch Chapter 6: ‘“You don’t own money, you’re just the one who’s holding it”: borrowing, lending and the fair person in North Manchester’ Katherine Smith Chapter 7: ‘ “Doing your best” in a London secondary school: valuing, caring and thinking through neoliberalism’ Sarah Winkler-Reid Chapter 8: ‘Anthropocene East Anglia’ Richard Irvine 1
Chapter 9: ‘Loudly sing cuckoo: more-than-human seasonalities in Britain’ Andrew Whitehouse Commentary: ‘Actually existing classes’ Jeanette Edwards Commentary: ‘Africa’s Britain, disciplined’ Ann H. Kelly Epilogue: ‘“Anthropology”, “Sociology”, “British”, “Porter”: the limits of labels and cultural categories’ Nigel Rapport