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  1. The Orient Strikes Back.Brian Moeran - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (3):77-112.
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  • (1 other version)Multiculturalism.Duncan Ivison - 2001 - In Neil J. Smelser & Paul B. Baltes (eds.), International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Elsevier. pp. 10169-75.
    First published in the International Encyclopaedia of Social and Behavioural Sciences (Pergamon Press, 2001); reprinted in the 2nd edition (2015). An overview of different justifications of multiculturalism in contemporary political theory, as well as various challenges to and critiques of those arguments.
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  • La etapa de la modernidad.Timothy P. Mitchell - 2022 - Resistances. Journal of the Philosophy of History 3 (5):e21087.
    Las narrativas que han afirmado la relación de la modernidad con lo Occidental, así como aquellas que han tratado de descentralizar el centro de lo moderno coinciden en un aspecto primordial: ver la modernidad como un producto de Occidente. Lo que está en cuestión, entonces, es pensar si se puede hallar una manera de teorizar la cuestión de la modernidad que la relocalice en un contexto mundial, y al mismo tiempo, permita a ese contexto complejizar, en lugar de simplemente revertir, (...)
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  • The Rutherford Atom of Culture.Lawrence A. Hirschfeld - 2018 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 18 (3-4):231-261.
    Increasingly, psychologists have shown a healthy interest in cultural variation and a skepticism about assuming that research with North American and Northern European undergraduates provides reliable insight into universal psychological processes. Unfortunately, this reappraisal has not been extended to questioning the notion of culture central to this project. Rather, there is wide acceptance that culture refers to a kind of social form that is entity-like, territorialized, marked by a high degree of shared beliefs and coalescing into patterns of key values (...)
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  • (1 other version)Fashion Trends, Japonisme and Postmodernism.Lise Skov - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (3):129-151.
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  • Landscapes: Central and Western Desert Paintings and the Discourse of Art.Jon Stratton - 1994 - Theory, Culture and Society 11 (1):95-128.
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  • (1 other version)When `the Light of the Great Cultural Problems Moves on': On the Possibility of a Cultural Theory of Modernity.Heidrun Friese & Peter Wagner - 2000 - Thesis Eleven 61 (1):25-40.
    Comparative analysis of civilizations has recently revived and has led into a debate about varieties of modernity. This connection between an empirically defined area of study, `civilizations', and a theme that is predominantly seen as conceptual, `modernity', is a peculiar one and raises crucial questions for any social theory. Can `modernity' be located spatio-temporally among the civilizations? Is it itself a civilization (or the successor to all civilizations), or does it not rather refer to a human condition? This article takes (...)
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  • 'A demented form of the familiar': Postmodernism and educational research.Maggie Maclure - 2006 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 40 (2):223–239.
    What can postmodernism do for, or to, educational research? The article discusses its potential for resisting closure and simplification. Developing a ‘preposterous’, anachronistic postmodern method that is caught up with surrealism and the baroque, the article plays with trompel'oeil paintings and outmoded popular entertainments such as magic lanterns, peep shows and clockwork automata as figures for critique and analysis. It argues for defamiliarisation, fascination, recalcitrance and frivolity as methodic practices for research in the compromised conditions of postmodernity, and as forms (...)
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  • Positionality, worldview and geographical research: A personal account of a research journey.Lorna Gold - 2002 - Ethics, Place and Environment 5 (3):223 – 237.
    Much has been written in recent years over the need to disclose the 'positionality' of geographical researchers. At the same time, there is a growing awareness that such positionality, however much disclosed, can never fully express the complexities underpinning a research relationship. This essay explores these issues through a retrospective review of research carried out into the economic geographies of the Economy of Sharing. It argues that the issues surrounding positionality can be much more than a question of hidden agendas, (...)
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  • (1 other version)Immersion, Immigration, Immutability: Regimes of Learning and Politics of Labeling in Study Abroad.Neriko Musha Doerr & Richard Suarez - 2018 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 54 (2):183-197.
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  • Multiculturalism and Museums.Jan Nederveen Pieterse - 1997 - Theory, Culture and Society 14 (4):123-146.
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  • (1 other version)Reviews : Mary W. Helms, Ulysses' Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge, and Geographical Distance, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988, £25.20, paper £8.30, xii + 297 pp. [REVIEW]Nigel Thrift - 1990 - History of the Human Sciences 3 (2):294-296.
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  • Empowering the users? A critical textual analysis of the role of users in open source software development.Netta Iivari - 2009 - AI and Society 23 (4):511-528.
    This paper outlines a critical, textual approach for the analysis of the relationship between different actors in information technology (IT) production, and further concretizes the approach in the analysis of the role of users in the open source software (OSS) development literature. Central concepts of the approach are outlined. The role of users is conceptualized as reader involvement aiming to contribute to the configuration of the reader (to how users and the parameters for their work practices are defined in OSS (...)
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  • Review essay: Heidegger, literary theory and social criticism.Joseph D. Lewandowski - 1994 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 20 (3):109-122.
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  • (1 other version)Puttings things into words. Ethnographic description and the silence of the social.Stefan Hirschauer - 2006 - Human Studies 29 (4):413 - 441.
    The article defines a new referential problem of ethnographic description: the verbalization of the “silent” dimension of the social. As a documentary procedure, description has been devalued by more advanced recording techniques that set a naturalistic standard concerning the reification of qualitative “data.” I discuss this standard from the perspective of the sociology of knowledge and replace it by a challenge unknown to all empirical procedures relying on primary verbalizations of informants. Descriptions have to solve the problems of the voiceless, (...)
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  • How Big a Tent? Commentary on The Uncertain Sciences by Bruce Mazlish.Richard Wilk - 2003 - History of the Human Sciences 16 (2):158-164.
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  • The identification of self.Andrew Travers - 1995 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 25 (3):303–340.
    The approach is by a winding road about nine miles long, boldly cut out of the rock … the road comes to an end in front of a long underground passage leading into the mountain, enclosed by a heavy double door of bronze. At the far end of the underground passage a wide lift, panelled with sheets of copper, awaits the visitor. Through a vertical shaft of 330 feet cut right through the rock, it rises up to the level of (...)
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  • (1 other version)Privileged Nomads.Dick Pels - 1999 - Theory, Culture and Society 16 (1):63-86.
    This article explores some aspects of the long-standing metaphoric conjunction between the images of the intellectual and that of the stranger in the history of social thought. Recently, this conjunction has re-emerged in the self-complimentary image of the `exilic' or `nomadic' intellectual, who is torn between identities and transgresses cultural and linguistic traditions. The article offers a critical appraisal of the intellectualist presumption lurking behind such self-identifications, and raises the issue of intellectual spokespersonship in the novel conditions of a postmodern (...)
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  • The Tragedy of the Freelance Hustler: Hegel, Gender and Civil Society.Laura Brace - 2002 - Contemporary Political Theory 1 (3):329-347.
    This paper explores the gendering of civil society by focusing on the moral campaigns against wet nursing and in favour of maternal feeding in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, drawing attention to the overlap between the family and market society. It argues that the organization of sexual difference is central to the social world and to the idea of civil society in Hegel's Philosophy of Right. Men enjoyed the benefits of ethical incorporation into a rich version of civil (...)
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  • Taxidermy as rhetoric of self-making: Charles Waterton (1782–1865), wandering naturalist.Cristina Grasseni - 1998 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 29 (2):269-294.
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  • (1 other version)Reviews : Mary W. Helms, Ulysses' Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge, and Geographical Distance, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1988, £25.20, paper £8.30, xii + 297 pp. [REVIEW]Thrift Nigel - 1990 - History of the Human Sciences 3 (2):294-296.
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  • Close Encounters of the Third Kind: the anthropologist as actor.Bambi Ceuppens - 1995 - Philosophica 55 (1):1.
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  • Escape from modernity: On the ethnography of repair and the repair of ethnography. [REVIEW]John Maanen - 1990 - Human Studies 13 (3):275 - 284.
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  • How the Ethiopian Changed His Skin.D. Selden - 2013 - Classical Antiquity 32 (2):322-377.
    Aksumite elites electively identified themselves as “black” in relation to the paler integument of other Mediterranean peoples. Prior to the fourth century CE, the proper noun Aithiopía referred to the area of northern Sudan. Aksum, however, deliberately appropriated the Greek term for its own geopolitical purposes, partly as a way to write itself both into the grand narratives of Graeco-Roman history, where “Ethiopians” recurrently figure as morally “blameless,” as well as—with their conversion to Christianity—into Old and New Testamental eschatologies that (...)
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  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW][author unknown] - 2001 - Ethics, Place and Environment 4 (2):179-195.
    . Book Reviews. Ethics, Place & Environment: Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 179-195.
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  • (1 other version)Immersion, Immigration, Immutability: Regimes of Learning and Politics of Labeling in Study Abroad.Neriko Musha Doerr & Richard Suarez - 2018 - Educational Studies 54 (2):183-197.
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  • America' Meets `Japan.Jacob Raz & Aviad E. Raz - 1996 - Theory, Culture and Society 13 (3):153-178.
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  • Getting and spending1.Nicholas Abercrombie - 2000 - Cultural Values 4 (3):374-382.
    . Getting and spending. Cultural Values: Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 374-382.
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  • Book Reviews. [REVIEW]David Chaney - 1991 - Theory, Culture and Society 8 (2):198-200.
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  • The Reflective Methodologists A Cultural Analysis of Danish Pedagogues’ Individualised Silence and Collective Articulations.Bjørg Kjær - 2018 - Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 19 (1):91-113.
    This article takes its point of departure in a stance found among practitioners – including teachers, preschool teachers, kindergarten pedagogues and other welfare professionals – in which theory is considered abstract and thus irrelevant to or unhelpful in their daily work. In exploring the backgrounds of this stance, I address the issue at two levels: one that focuses on the professional identities, cultural logics and communicative norms of kindergarten staff groups in their actual, contemporary context; and another that focuses on (...)
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  • (1 other version)When `the Light of the Great Cultural Problems Moves on': On the Possibility of a Cultural Theory of Modernity.Friese Heidrun & Wagner Peter - 2000 - Thesis Eleven 61 (1):25-40.
    Comparative analysis of civilizations has recently revived and has led into a debate about varieties of modernity. This connection between an empirically defined area of study, `civilizations', and a theme that is predominantly seen as conceptual, `modernity', is a peculiar one and raises crucial questions for any social theory. Can `modernity' be located spatio-temporally among the civilizations? Is it itself a civilization (or the successor to all civilizations), or does it not rather refer to a human condition? This article takes (...)
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  • Reading Minds and Telling Tales in a Cultural Borderland.Cheryl Mattingly - 2008 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 36 (1):136-154.
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  • From the native point of view.Albert Doja - 2015 - History of the Human Sciences 28 (4):44-75.
    In the standard native tradition of Albanian studies, descriptive and empirical research has only confirmed their own ultimate goal of constructing national specificity and a particularly antiquated view of national culture. In this article, I show how and why an articulate analysis of the main intellectual traditions and their impact can provide fresh insights into grasping the cultural particularism of Albanian studies. Methodologically, a new picture of knowledge production must arise if we consider the historical, cultural, political and ideological terrain (...)
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  • ‘Culture’, ‘society’and the figure of man.Christine Helliwell & Andbarry Hindess - 1999 - History of the Human Sciences 12 (4):1-20.
    The invocation of large-scale social unities - states, societies, empires, cultures, civilizations - is a long-established and pervasive practice among sociologists, anthropologists, historians, political scientists and so on. This article examines the treatment of such unities as defined or held together by shared understandings and values, and as independent, boundary-maintaining social systems. We argue that both the ideational and the systemic presumptions at work here are dependent on what Foucault calls the figure of man: the first as an inescapable consequence (...)
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  • On Culture.Jerry Palmer - 1994 - Theory, Culture and Society 11 (3):153-161.
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  • (Re)writing ethnography: the unsettling questions for nursing research raised by post‐structural approaches to ‘the field’.Trudy Rudge - 1996 - Nursing Inquiry 3 (3):146-152.
    Positivist ethnographic research situates the participant observer in an objectivist position towards the field. Using poststructural perspectives to analyse the field challenges and unsettles objectivist assumptions underpinning ethnography. Neither is merging of the two approaches completely unproblematic. A crucial element in a coherent amalgam centres around resolution of potential contradictions emanating from the place of field notes in ethnographic research, and the position of the researcher (author) vis‐a‐vis such notes. Contemporary approaches to field notes maintain that such notes are not (...)
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  • Jazzgeist.Raminder Kaur & Partha Banerjea - 2000 - Theory, Culture and Society 17 (3):159-180.
    This article investigates the changing currency of racial politics in jazz music formations, with a comparative focus on Nazi and contemporary Germany. While it is noted that music articulates politics in an oblique or metonymic way, in highly-charged contexts music is lent further propositional capacity. This is highlighted in Nazi Germany where jazz music was seen as barbaric, `dark' and uncivilized, and classical music represented order and cultural supremacy. These dynamics continue but, often, in a slightly askew form for contemporary (...)
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  • Curtain rising, baton falling: The politics of musical conducting in contemporary Argentina. [REVIEW]Claudio E. Benzecry - 2006 - Theory and Society 35 (4):445-479.
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  • Editor's introduction.Hwa Yol Jung - 1993 - Human Studies 16 (1):1-17.
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  • Escape from modernity: On the ethnography of repair and the repair of ethnography.John Van Maanen - 1990 - Human Studies 13 (3):275-284.
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  • `The Sixties' Trope.Eleanor Townsley - 2001 - Theory, Culture and Society 18 (6):99-123.
    Combining insights from narrative analysis in sociology and trope theory in anthropology, this article develops a theory of tropes that emphasizes their historical production and political effects. Tropes function politically to enable some narratives, identities and resolutions while foreclosing others. As a powerful tool for socio-historical analysis, a consideration of tropes is crucial for deconstructing the taken-for-granted predicates and the `dangerous' consequences of political narratives. To illustrate the argument, the trope of `the Sixties' is analyzed as a case study.
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  • Sociology on a Razor's Edge: Configurations of the Sacred at the College of Sociology.Michael Richardson - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (3):27-44.
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  • Integrating feminist epistemologies in undergraduate research methods.Patricia Ewick - 1994 - Gender and Society 8 (1):92-108.
    In the past two decades, feminists and other science critics have challenged the basic premises of positivist social science. These critiques and the alternative epistemologies they underwrite have not been fully addressed, no less integrated, into our undergraduate methodology curriculum. This article examines the peculiar challenges encountered by teachers of research methods in this time of epistemological transition, ambivalence, and skepticism. Relying on Harding's concept of strong objectivity, this article argues that feminist critiques can be fully reconciled with empirical social (...)
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  • Image Accumulation and Cultural Syncretism.Massimo Canevacci - 1992 - Theory, Culture and Society 9 (3):95-110.
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