LECHe Module3 Textbook
... As the term ‘discourse’ is often fairly loosely used in lay vocabulary these days, I thought I might quickly clarify some relevant theoretical points underpinning its meaning, even if very simply. The term was given a more particular and precise meaning in the works of the French philosopher and soc ...
... As the term ‘discourse’ is often fairly loosely used in lay vocabulary these days, I thought I might quickly clarify some relevant theoretical points underpinning its meaning, even if very simply. The term was given a more particular and precise meaning in the works of the French philosopher and soc ...
practice theory
... or infused within them by animating beliefs, desires, and intentions. Indeed, the stronger suggestion is that rules, norms and concepts get their meaning, and their normative authority and force, from their embodiment in publicly accessible activity. Taylor’s account is characteristic of this move: ...
... or infused within them by animating beliefs, desires, and intentions. Indeed, the stronger suggestion is that rules, norms and concepts get their meaning, and their normative authority and force, from their embodiment in publicly accessible activity. Taylor’s account is characteristic of this move: ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... capitalism and the “world-system.” These concepts are in need of decolonization and this can only be achieved with a decolonial epistemology that overtly assumes a decolonial geopolitics and body-politics of knowledge as points of departure to a radical critique. The following examples can illustrat ...
... capitalism and the “world-system.” These concepts are in need of decolonization and this can only be achieved with a decolonial epistemology that overtly assumes a decolonial geopolitics and body-politics of knowledge as points of departure to a radical critique. The following examples can illustrat ...
Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political
... capitalism and the “world-system.” These concepts are in need of decolonization and this can only be achieved with a decolonial epistemology that overtly assumes a decolonial geopolitics and body-politics of knowledge as points of departure to a radical critique. The following examples can illustrat ...
... capitalism and the “world-system.” These concepts are in need of decolonization and this can only be achieved with a decolonial epistemology that overtly assumes a decolonial geopolitics and body-politics of knowledge as points of departure to a radical critique. The following examples can illustrat ...
6 - Rlsms.com
... In addition to Level 3.0, in-depth inferences and applications that go beyond what was taught such as: use the knowledge to conduct additional investigations or to conduct investigations about knowledge. (ex: other resources are used) Level 3.5 ...
... In addition to Level 3.0, in-depth inferences and applications that go beyond what was taught such as: use the knowledge to conduct additional investigations or to conduct investigations about knowledge. (ex: other resources are used) Level 3.5 ...
PowerPoint Presentation - McGraw
... lifetime of experiences from certain members of the community being studied. • Life histories reveal how specific people perceive, react to, and contribute to changes that affect their lives. • Since life histories are focused on how different people interpret and deal with similar issues, they can ...
... lifetime of experiences from certain members of the community being studied. • Life histories reveal how specific people perceive, react to, and contribute to changes that affect their lives. • Since life histories are focused on how different people interpret and deal with similar issues, they can ...
- Philsci-Archive
... is accepted and rejected in science - namely observational and experimental results, laws and theories. It is the sociologist of science, not the philosopher of science, who can improve knowledge about science, how it proceeds, and modifies its beliefs, its "scientific myths" one might say. Truth, f ...
... is accepted and rejected in science - namely observational and experimental results, laws and theories. It is the sociologist of science, not the philosopher of science, who can improve knowledge about science, how it proceeds, and modifies its beliefs, its "scientific myths" one might say. Truth, f ...
critical political ecology
... Furthermore, this approach also implies questioning how far environmental degradation, per se may be attributed simply to capitalism, or the exploitation of industry and the state. By questioning the essentialist link between capitalism and environmental degradation, this book challenges virtually a ...
... Furthermore, this approach also implies questioning how far environmental degradation, per se may be attributed simply to capitalism, or the exploitation of industry and the state. By questioning the essentialist link between capitalism and environmental degradation, this book challenges virtually a ...
Consuming and communicating identities
... student. Here, a special thanks is extended to Nathalie Dimc and Johan Hinders, the works of which have directly contributed to this thesis, and the students from different branches of the department who took part in the Korsnäs excavations 2009–2010 with great ambition and enthusiasm. One advantag ...
... student. Here, a special thanks is extended to Nathalie Dimc and Johan Hinders, the works of which have directly contributed to this thesis, and the students from different branches of the department who took part in the Korsnäs excavations 2009–2010 with great ambition and enthusiasm. One advantag ...
Chapter 1 Multimodal Studies: An Emerging Research Field
... the challenges of the new medium or semiotic modality and serve as a tool for further application within existing and new domains. ...
... the challenges of the new medium or semiotic modality and serve as a tool for further application within existing and new domains. ...
Phenomenological Sociology - Center for Subjectivity Research
... achieve knowledge of the real nature of things. A consequence of this view is that the world in which we live is very different from the world that the exact sciences describe, the latter having an exclusive claim to reality. The life-world, by contrast, is a mere construction, a result of our respo ...
... achieve knowledge of the real nature of things. A consequence of this view is that the world in which we live is very different from the world that the exact sciences describe, the latter having an exclusive claim to reality. The life-world, by contrast, is a mere construction, a result of our respo ...
ANTH - Anthropology
... Offered: As needed. ANTH 233 - Methods in Anthropology (4) Students are introduced to multiple qualitative and quantitative methods for data collection and analysis, and instruction on spoken and written communication, with emphasis on ethnographic and observed data. Prerequisite: Completion of at l ...
... Offered: As needed. ANTH 233 - Methods in Anthropology (4) Students are introduced to multiple qualitative and quantitative methods for data collection and analysis, and instruction on spoken and written communication, with emphasis on ethnographic and observed data. Prerequisite: Completion of at l ...
Forthcoming in Bhaskar, R., Esbjörn
... subversive. Notwithstanding his spiritual turn, he would remain an unconventional socialist at heart till the very end. His philosophy of metaReality can even be considered a prefiguration of a joyful communism in which the personal development of each and every one would go hand in hand with the so ...
... subversive. Notwithstanding his spiritual turn, he would remain an unconventional socialist at heart till the very end. His philosophy of metaReality can even be considered a prefiguration of a joyful communism in which the personal development of each and every one would go hand in hand with the so ...
Post-DeveloPment theory anD the Discourse-agency
... homogenizing the very idea of development and conflating it with the modernization theory of the 1950s and 1960s (cf. Escobar 1995; Sachs 1992), but also that it is responsible for constructing ‘the others’—that is, the recipients and intended beneficiaries of aid—as post-colonial subjects (Brigg 20 ...
... homogenizing the very idea of development and conflating it with the modernization theory of the 1950s and 1960s (cf. Escobar 1995; Sachs 1992), but also that it is responsible for constructing ‘the others’—that is, the recipients and intended beneficiaries of aid—as post-colonial subjects (Brigg 20 ...
understanding scientific practices: cultural studies
... engaged position; philosophers more frequently aspire to what Thomas Nagel (1986) has called "the view from nowhere." Finally, philosophical theorists have most often cast their projects as allied with or even subsumed by a resolutely naturalistic understanding of the world. As Quine, perhaps the mo ...
... engaged position; philosophers more frequently aspire to what Thomas Nagel (1986) has called "the view from nowhere." Finally, philosophical theorists have most often cast their projects as allied with or even subsumed by a resolutely naturalistic understanding of the world. As Quine, perhaps the mo ...
COMMUNICATION, CONTEXTS AND CULTURE A communicative
... a general framework for analysing intercultural communication. Communicative action will be shown to construct contexts which are reflexively generated by the very communicative actions which are performed in this context. We will refer to this reflexive process as „contextualisation“. On an analyti ...
... a general framework for analysing intercultural communication. Communicative action will be shown to construct contexts which are reflexively generated by the very communicative actions which are performed in this context. We will refer to this reflexive process as „contextualisation“. On an analyti ...
Issue as PDF-file - Centre for Pacific and Asian Studies
... team of international contributors reveal how communities at the periphery take charge of their lives, champion the virtues of their own local systems of production and consumption, and engage in the complexities of new structures of development that demand a response to the vacillations of global p ...
... team of international contributors reveal how communities at the periphery take charge of their lives, champion the virtues of their own local systems of production and consumption, and engage in the complexities of new structures of development that demand a response to the vacillations of global p ...
Subliming and Subverting
... meaningful in guiding scientific behaviour. From the subversive perspective, we might say that these conditions enact the norms. Their discovery is subversive in at least one sense: it challenges any conception of scientific rationality that denies a role to such enactive conditions. Subversives use ...
... meaningful in guiding scientific behaviour. From the subversive perspective, we might say that these conditions enact the norms. Their discovery is subversive in at least one sense: it challenges any conception of scientific rationality that denies a role to such enactive conditions. Subversives use ...
Introduction to "Fieldwork Is Not What It Used to Be"
... Western Pacific (entitled “The Subject, Method, and Scope of This Ethnography” [Malinowski 1961 (1922), 1–26]). This text, along with a few influential later essays by Clifford Geertz, instantiates in many programs the ethos of fieldwork practice and especially the metamethodological practices that ...
... Western Pacific (entitled “The Subject, Method, and Scope of This Ethnography” [Malinowski 1961 (1922), 1–26]). This text, along with a few influential later essays by Clifford Geertz, instantiates in many programs the ethos of fieldwork practice and especially the metamethodological practices that ...
Book review: citizenship, nationality and ethnicity. by T. K. Oommen
... the global age, an age the author sees as discontinuous with the past, and that can constitute an account that is neither modernist, postmodernist, or antimodernist? The narrative of modernism is, after all, exquisitely adept at incorporating innovation, rupture, change, and the promise of new futur ...
... the global age, an age the author sees as discontinuous with the past, and that can constitute an account that is neither modernist, postmodernist, or antimodernist? The narrative of modernism is, after all, exquisitely adept at incorporating innovation, rupture, change, and the promise of new futur ...
SFR12_06 Jordan et al GR01.indd
... evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history with ego could no longer be relied on to estimate the reliability of ...
... evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history with ego could no longer be relied on to estimate the reliability of ...
Cultural evolution of the structure of human groups
... evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history with ego could no longer be relied on to estimate the reliability of ...
... evolution, individuals became more likely to encounter strangers who were the kin or partners of their partners, but not directly known to them; that is, in-group strangers (Hill et al. 2011). At this point the interaction history with ego could no longer be relied on to estimate the reliability of ...
flexible capitalism
... At another level, the volume is intended more specifically as a contribution to anthropological literatures, both on work and on exchange. Considering how central a part work is of many people’s lives, there is a sense in which anthropologists have been remarkably inattentive to the subject. It is c ...
... At another level, the volume is intended more specifically as a contribution to anthropological literatures, both on work and on exchange. Considering how central a part work is of many people’s lives, there is a sense in which anthropologists have been remarkably inattentive to the subject. It is c ...
The Hofstede model
... The power distance dimension can be defined as ‘the extent to which less powerful members of a society accept and expect that power is distributed unequally’. In large power distance cultures, everyone has his or her rightful place in a social hierarchy. The rightful place concept is important for u ...
... The power distance dimension can be defined as ‘the extent to which less powerful members of a society accept and expect that power is distributed unequally’. In large power distance cultures, everyone has his or her rightful place in a social hierarchy. The rightful place concept is important for u ...
Social-ecological systems as epistemic objects
... these share the conviction, however, that human activities have a strong and formative impact on the earth’s ecosystems, climate and hydrosphere – a claim encapsulated in the notion that we have entered a new geological epoch, the so-called Anthropocene. The various participants in the discourse on ...
... these share the conviction, however, that human activities have a strong and formative impact on the earth’s ecosystems, climate and hydrosphere – a claim encapsulated in the notion that we have entered a new geological epoch, the so-called Anthropocene. The various participants in the discourse on ...