An Anthropology of the Enlightenment
Moral Social Relations Then and Today
Herausgeber: Wardle, Huon; Rapport, Nigel
An Anthropology of the Enlightenment
Moral Social Relations Then and Today
Herausgeber: Wardle, Huon; Rapport, Nigel
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In a time of intellectual uncertainty, the question of how we know what we do about human lives becomes ever more pressing. The essays collated in this volume argue that anthropology can be used to acknowledge, explore and interpret divergence and ideological conflict over human meaning.
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In a time of intellectual uncertainty, the question of how we know what we do about human lives becomes ever more pressing. The essays collated in this volume argue that anthropology can be used to acknowledge, explore and interpret divergence and ideological conflict over human meaning.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 208
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 156mm x 234mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 358g
- ISBN-13: 9781350086593
- ISBN-10: 1350086592
- Artikelnr.: 58024785
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 208
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Juli 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 156mm x 234mm x 13mm
- Gewicht: 358g
- ISBN-13: 9781350086593
- ISBN-10: 1350086592
- Artikelnr.: 58024785
Nigel Rapport is Professor of Anthropological and Philosophical Studies at the University of St Andrews, UK.Huon Wardle is Senior Lecturer at the University of St Andrews, UK.
List of ContributorsPreface: The 'Star' Consortium and the ASA Decennial ConferenceIntroduction: Moral Social Relations as Methodology and Everyday PracticeNigel Rapport (University of St. Andrews
UK) and Huon Wardle (University of St. Andrews
UK)1. After Sympathy
a QuestionAnne Line Dalsgård (Aarhus University
Denmark)2. His Father Came to Him in His Sleep: An Essay on Enlightenment
Mortalities and Immortalities in IcelandArnar Anason (University of Aberdeen
UK)3. On 'Bad Mind': Orienting Sentiments in Jamaican Street LifeHuon Wardle (University of St Andrews
UK)4. Westermarck
Moral Relativity and Ethical BehaviourDavid Shankland (University of Bristol
UK)5. Saving Sympathy: Adam Smith
Morality
Law and CommerceDiane Austin-Broos (University of Sydney
Australia)6. 'Can We Have Our Nature/Culture Dichotomy Back
Please'?Nigel Clark (Lancaster University
UK)
Rupert Stasch (University of Cambridge
UK) and Jon Bialecki
(Lancaster University
UK)7. Who Are We to Judge? Two Metalogues on MoralityRonald Stade (University of Malmo
Sweden)8. 'We Are All Human': Cosmopolitanism as a Radically Political
Moral ProjectElisabeth Kirtsoglou (Durham University
UK)9. Transference and Cosmopolitan Politesse: Coming to Terms with the Distorted
'Tragic' Quality of Social Relations between Individual Human BeingsNigel Rapport (University of St Andrews
UK)10. Afterword: Becoming Enlightened About RelationsMarilyn Strathern (University of Cambridge
UK)Index
UK) and Huon Wardle (University of St. Andrews
UK)1. After Sympathy
a QuestionAnne Line Dalsgård (Aarhus University
Denmark)2. His Father Came to Him in His Sleep: An Essay on Enlightenment
Mortalities and Immortalities in IcelandArnar Anason (University of Aberdeen
UK)3. On 'Bad Mind': Orienting Sentiments in Jamaican Street LifeHuon Wardle (University of St Andrews
UK)4. Westermarck
Moral Relativity and Ethical BehaviourDavid Shankland (University of Bristol
UK)5. Saving Sympathy: Adam Smith
Morality
Law and CommerceDiane Austin-Broos (University of Sydney
Australia)6. 'Can We Have Our Nature/Culture Dichotomy Back
Please'?Nigel Clark (Lancaster University
UK)
Rupert Stasch (University of Cambridge
UK) and Jon Bialecki
(Lancaster University
UK)7. Who Are We to Judge? Two Metalogues on MoralityRonald Stade (University of Malmo
Sweden)8. 'We Are All Human': Cosmopolitanism as a Radically Political
Moral ProjectElisabeth Kirtsoglou (Durham University
UK)9. Transference and Cosmopolitan Politesse: Coming to Terms with the Distorted
'Tragic' Quality of Social Relations between Individual Human BeingsNigel Rapport (University of St Andrews
UK)10. Afterword: Becoming Enlightened About RelationsMarilyn Strathern (University of Cambridge
UK)Index
List of ContributorsPreface: The 'Star' Consortium and the ASA Decennial ConferenceIntroduction: Moral Social Relations as Methodology and Everyday PracticeNigel Rapport (University of St. Andrews
UK) and Huon Wardle (University of St. Andrews
UK)1. After Sympathy
a QuestionAnne Line Dalsgård (Aarhus University
Denmark)2. His Father Came to Him in His Sleep: An Essay on Enlightenment
Mortalities and Immortalities in IcelandArnar Anason (University of Aberdeen
UK)3. On 'Bad Mind': Orienting Sentiments in Jamaican Street LifeHuon Wardle (University of St Andrews
UK)4. Westermarck
Moral Relativity and Ethical BehaviourDavid Shankland (University of Bristol
UK)5. Saving Sympathy: Adam Smith
Morality
Law and CommerceDiane Austin-Broos (University of Sydney
Australia)6. 'Can We Have Our Nature/Culture Dichotomy Back
Please'?Nigel Clark (Lancaster University
UK)
Rupert Stasch (University of Cambridge
UK) and Jon Bialecki
(Lancaster University
UK)7. Who Are We to Judge? Two Metalogues on MoralityRonald Stade (University of Malmo
Sweden)8. 'We Are All Human': Cosmopolitanism as a Radically Political
Moral ProjectElisabeth Kirtsoglou (Durham University
UK)9. Transference and Cosmopolitan Politesse: Coming to Terms with the Distorted
'Tragic' Quality of Social Relations between Individual Human BeingsNigel Rapport (University of St Andrews
UK)10. Afterword: Becoming Enlightened About RelationsMarilyn Strathern (University of Cambridge
UK)Index
UK) and Huon Wardle (University of St. Andrews
UK)1. After Sympathy
a QuestionAnne Line Dalsgård (Aarhus University
Denmark)2. His Father Came to Him in His Sleep: An Essay on Enlightenment
Mortalities and Immortalities in IcelandArnar Anason (University of Aberdeen
UK)3. On 'Bad Mind': Orienting Sentiments in Jamaican Street LifeHuon Wardle (University of St Andrews
UK)4. Westermarck
Moral Relativity and Ethical BehaviourDavid Shankland (University of Bristol
UK)5. Saving Sympathy: Adam Smith
Morality
Law and CommerceDiane Austin-Broos (University of Sydney
Australia)6. 'Can We Have Our Nature/Culture Dichotomy Back
Please'?Nigel Clark (Lancaster University
UK)
Rupert Stasch (University of Cambridge
UK) and Jon Bialecki
(Lancaster University
UK)7. Who Are We to Judge? Two Metalogues on MoralityRonald Stade (University of Malmo
Sweden)8. 'We Are All Human': Cosmopolitanism as a Radically Political
Moral ProjectElisabeth Kirtsoglou (Durham University
UK)9. Transference and Cosmopolitan Politesse: Coming to Terms with the Distorted
'Tragic' Quality of Social Relations between Individual Human BeingsNigel Rapport (University of St Andrews
UK)10. Afterword: Becoming Enlightened About RelationsMarilyn Strathern (University of Cambridge
UK)Index