Relations : an anthropological account / Marilyn Strathern.

By: Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Publisher: Durham : Duke University Press, c2020Description: xiii, 274 p. ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781478007845
  • 9781478008354
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Relations.LOC classification:
  • GN345 .S77 2020
Contents:
Introductions: The compulsion of relations -- Experimentations, English and otherwise -- Registers of comparison -- Coda to part I: Comparing persons again -- Expansion and contraction -- The dissimilar and the different -- Coda to part II: Preparation -- Enlightenment dramas -- Kinship unbound -- Coda to part III: Visibility -- Conclusions: The re-invention of relation at moments of knowledge-making.
Summary: "In RELATIONS, Marilyn Strathern offers a deep and sustained analysis of the concept "relations." Strathern traces the English language use of the term through the centuries, showing that up until the eighteenth century, relations had been limited to describing logic and epistemology and had not been used as a reference to kin (or any other social relations). As Strathern traces the historical shift and the way this reflected emerging ideas about learning and new forms of kinship, she also weaves analysis relating to knowledge-making, comparison, and social science criticism. Strathern explores these themes in eight chapters, each with their own substantive focus, but which when read together offer diverse yet interconnected reflections on the theoretical expansiveness of the concept. In weaving together analysis of kin-making and knowledge-making, she opens up new ways of thinking about the contours (and limits) of epistemic and relational possibilities of the English-speaking world. In chapter 1, Strathern analyzes how relations emerge within contexts of debate and conversation. This functions as a model to imagine what types of connections and associations emerge as a result of what Strathern calls "knowledge exchanges." This leads her to analyze the relationship between anthropologists and the communities and to raise questions about the limit of ethnographic methods and knowledge-making. The final chapter, chapter 8, is concerned with the relationships between anthropologists and scholars in other disciplines, as well as the relationship between anthropology as a discipline and other disciplines. This chapter generates critical questions about the particular tools that emerge from an anthropological discussion of relations and, more specifically, an English-speaking discussion of relations. Here, Strathern suggests that English-speaking anthropologists can use relations as an analytic to better understand their disciplinary conventions, as well as think beyond these conventions to generate more critical analyses. This project will be of interest to students and scholars of anthropology and social theory"-- Provided by publisher.
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
PRINT PRINT المكتبة الرئيسية الطابق الثالث أ GN345.S77 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 0090000139107
Browsing المكتبة الرئيسية shelves, Shelving location: الطابق الثالث أ Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
GN345.P76 1999 The problem of context GN345.S24 1976 Culture and practical reason GN345.S33 1989 The dilemma of context GN345.S77 2020 Relations : an anthropological account / GN345.S83 2007 Subjectivity : ethnographic investigations GN345.T37 1993 Mimesis and alterity : a particular of the senses GN345.T38 1992 The nervous system

Includes bibliographical references (p. [229]-249) and index.

Introductions: The compulsion of relations -- Experimentations, English and otherwise -- Registers of comparison -- Coda to part I: Comparing persons again -- Expansion and contraction -- The dissimilar and the different -- Coda to part II: Preparation -- Enlightenment dramas -- Kinship unbound -- Coda to part III: Visibility -- Conclusions: The re-invention of relation at moments of knowledge-making.

"In RELATIONS, Marilyn Strathern offers a deep and sustained analysis of the concept "relations." Strathern traces the English language use of the term through the centuries, showing that up until the eighteenth century, relations had been limited to describing logic and epistemology and had not been used as a reference to kin (or any other social relations). As Strathern traces the historical shift and the way this reflected emerging ideas about learning and new forms of kinship, she also weaves analysis relating to knowledge-making, comparison, and social science criticism. Strathern explores these themes in eight chapters, each with their own substantive focus, but which when read together offer diverse yet interconnected reflections on the theoretical expansiveness of the concept. In weaving together analysis of kin-making and knowledge-making, she opens up new ways of thinking about the contours (and limits) of epistemic and relational possibilities of the English-speaking world. In chapter 1, Strathern analyzes how relations emerge within contexts of debate and conversation. This functions as a model to imagine what types of connections and associations emerge as a result of what Strathern calls "knowledge exchanges." This leads her to analyze the relationship between anthropologists and the communities and to raise questions about the limit of ethnographic methods and knowledge-making. The final chapter, chapter 8, is concerned with the relationships between anthropologists and scholars in other disciplines, as well as the relationship between anthropology as a discipline and other disciplines. This chapter generates critical questions about the particular tools that emerge from an anthropological discussion of relations and, more specifically, an English-speaking discussion of relations. Here, Strathern suggests that English-speaking anthropologists can use relations as an analytic to better understand their disciplinary conventions, as well as think beyond these conventions to generate more critical analyses. This project will be of interest to students and scholars of anthropology and social theory"-- Provided by publisher.

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