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Beyond Cultural History? The Material Turn, Praxiography, and
Beyond Cultural History? The Material Turn, Praxiography, and

... und seine Patientinnen um 1730 in 1987) placed eighteenth-century female patients’ experience of their own bodies centre stage [25]. Duden described a world in which the body, which was thought to ...
Lecture 5
Lecture 5

... Today most social scientists reject the cultured vs. uncultured concept of culture and the opposition of culture to human nature. They recognize that non-elites are as cultured as elites (and that non-Westerners are just as civilized); they are just cultured in a different way. During the Romantic E ...
Culture - University of Idaho
Culture - University of Idaho

... • Culture is a glue that holds the society together. • It provides guidelines for right and wrong behavior. • Culture is both material and nonmaterial. • Material culture consists of objects created in the society, e.g. the desk or bed you sit at when studying. • Nonmaterial culture consists of non- ...
introduction
introduction

... both nationally and internationally during the past quarter of a century, a sociology of the sociology of sport now seems appropriate. Accordingly, for this special issue, we attempted to solicit contributions that provide critical, comparative, sociohistorical analyses of the problems, patterns, an ...
One-Dimensional Sport
One-Dimensional Sport

... with sporting practice, that pre-occupy the sports philosopher, William Morgan, in his latest book Why Sports Morally Matter. In his analysis of sport in the USA, William Morgan has proved to be one of the few critics prepared to stake out a concrete political position, one that avoids “the danger ...
Lesson 4: Culture - College of the Canyons
Lesson 4: Culture - College of the Canyons

... Variations in Culture  Although much research focuses on the differences between cultures, there is also tremendous variation within a culture.  Multiculturalism values diverse racial, ethnic, national, and linguistic backgrounds and so encourages the retention of cultural differences within soci ...
Lesson 4: Culture - Solon City Schools
Lesson 4: Culture - Solon City Schools

... Variations in Culture  Although much research focuses on the differences between cultures, there is also tremendous variation within a culture.  Multiculturalism values diverse racial, ethnic, national, and linguistic backgrounds and so encourages the retention of cultural differences within soci ...
essay20writing20techniques
essay20writing20techniques

... biological aspects of body. This was then linked to Bourdieu’s theory of the body, as physical capital captures the idea of the body as personal resources and social symbols of identity that contributes to the production of social differences. Finally, we have explored how Elias’s characteristic of ...
The Interpretation of Cultures
The Interpretation of Cultures

... beings, South Sea Martians? That they are just the same as we at base, but with some peculiar, but really incidental, customs we do not happen to have gone in for? That they are innately gifted or even instinctively driven in certain directions rather than others? Or that human nature does not exist ...
Cultural aspects of Traditional Sports and Games
Cultural aspects of Traditional Sports and Games

... changed: until then the population had been predominately rural, but already by 1970 half of the Finnish population had moved to the cities. This changed the nature of pesäpallo as well. In urban areas a different approach was needed in order to motivate the city dwellers to play. The game became mo ...
Lesson 4: Culture
Lesson 4: Culture

... Variations in Culture  Although much research focuses on the differences between cultures, there is also tremendous variation within a culture.  Multiculturalism values diverse racial, ethnic, national, and linguistic backgrounds and so encourages the retention of cultural differences within soci ...
MMC220 last week
MMC220 last week

... opposed to empires and agriculture – It would also include an analysis of the contestations to this hegemonic order via counter hegemonic forces such as the Ottoman sultanates, religious groups, theological schools etc. ...
Culture, Identity and Representations of Region
Culture, Identity and Representations of Region

... To say that issues of culture and identity have become prominent themes in social and political enquiry over the last decade or so is something of an understatement. The 'cultural turn' and the rise of identity politics has fed a veritable academic industry across the humanities and social sciences. ...
Marxism Power Point
Marxism Power Point

... To deify or give unnatural significance or meaning to objects. Marx argued that capitalism fetishizes commodities/objects. ...
08SOC_Chapter_03
08SOC_Chapter_03

... Cultural Diversity and Similarity (pages 95–102) Cultures change according to three major processes. Cultures contain groups within them called subcultures and countercultures that differ in important ways from the main culture. People tend to make judgments based on their own cultures. While appare ...
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... anxieties, and stains of modern life ...
CHAPTER 2 Cultural Diversity
CHAPTER 2 Cultural Diversity

...  Cultural relativism helps sociologists in understanding why people in different societies have different cultural norms. – e.g. the Sepoy Rebellion of India in 1857 (gunpowder cartridges were sealed with pig or beef fat, both are religiously offensive to Hindu and Muslims) ...
- Leeds Beckett Repository
- Leeds Beckett Repository

... sociology can claim some success in deepening the public discourse when it comes to thinking about the complex social relations produced by sport, whether sport sociology gets the credit for this is unclear. Put another way, sport sociology’s success in creating a space distinct from leisure studies ...
Understanding and Challenging Culture Shock
Understanding and Challenging Culture Shock

... can easily identify the breakdown of verbal messages (involving different languages), whereas the breakdown of nonverbal messages is less obvious but more significant, as we feel emotionally confused and cut off from others. Feedback involves both verbal and non-verbal messages and varies with each ...
The Social Construction of Modern American Culture
The Social Construction of Modern American Culture

... There was a time when anthropologists only studied exotic cultures and sociologists concentrated on modern industrial societies. The scholars who eventually became known as anthropologists originally worked on behalf of European entrepreneurs who invested heavily in foreign markets in Southeast Asia ...
Beaches and Bodies - Brunel University London
Beaches and Bodies - Brunel University London

... its seduction and its danger. Drewe describes this aspect of the beach by recounting the death of Shelley by drowning, and his funeral pyre where the corpse split open, revealing his heart and brain. He describes the frantic hours Byron spent swimming away his grief at the loss and exposure of his f ...
Lesson 4: Culture
Lesson 4: Culture

... situation. Norms can be either formal, such as a law (a common type of formally defined norm that provides an explicit statement about what is permissible and what is illegal in a society) or the ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... Theoretical approach that explores ways in which human biology affects how we create culture  Claim that the large number of cultural universals shows the fact that all humans are members of a single biological species ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... Theoretical approach that explores ways in which human biology affects how we create culture  Claim that the large number of cultural universals shows the fact that all humans are members of a single biological species ...
Class 17: Culture, Identity, Conflict
Class 17: Culture, Identity, Conflict

... thereby “constructing” the conflict along certain lines – Is fight against Al Qaeda a fight against an Islamic group? A bunch of Saudis? A bunch of oil-rich bourgeoisie? ...
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Body culture studies

Body culture studies describe and compare bodily practice in the larger context of culture and society, i.e. in the tradition of anthropology, history and sociology. As body culture studies analyse culture and society in terms of human bodily practices, they are sometimes viewed as a form of materialist phenomenology.The significance of the body and of body culture (in German Körperkultur, in Danish kropskultur) was discovered since the early twentieth century by several historians and sociologists. During the 1980s, a particular school of Body Culture Studies spread, in connection with – and critically related to – sports studies. Body Culture Studies were especially established at Danish universities and academies and cooperated with Nordic, European and East Asian research networks.Body culture studies include studies of dance, play (play (activity)) and game, outdoor activities, festivities and other forms of movement culture. The field of body culture studies is floating towards studies of medical cultures, of working habits, of gender and sexual cultures, of fashion and body decoration, of popular festivity and more generally towards popular culture studies.Body Culture Studies have shown useful by making the study of sport enter into broader historical and sociological discussion – from the level of subjectivity to civil society, state and market.
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