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Forfatterne gir her en presentasjon av det flerkulturelle Norge, med temaer fra kultur, etnisitet, minoritetsspørsmål og tverrkulturell kommunikasjon, til konkrete diskusjoner om innvandreres forhold til skole, helsevesen og myndigheter. For studenter og lærere ved høgskoler, samt offentlig ansatte som flyktningekonsulenter, politifolk og tollere, og andre interesserte. Med kildeoversikt, litteraturlister og stikkordregister.
Både kulturelt og biologisk mangfold er truet i en globalisert verden på høygir. I Det umistelige viser Thomas Hylland Eriksen at begge deler er nødvendig - og som regel umulig å skille fra hverandre.Boken begynner før Columbus og slutter med den siste smarttelefonen. Underveis blir det klart at vi har utryddet sykdommer og hungersnød, men også arter og særegne kulturer. Urskog og villmark blir til plantasjer og betongørkener, små språk forsvinner og lokal kunnskap blir glemt.Denne ensrettingen er prisen vi betaler for menneskehetens fremgang. Vi har alle - fra Norge til Seychellene, fra Australia til Amazonas - lært oss å være forbrukere på omtrent de samme måtene. Resultatet er at mer og mer blir likt over alt.Samtidig er det lys i enden av tunnelen, og boken peker på både motkrefter og forsøk på å gjenskape mangfold i kultur og natur. Det er mer avgjørende enn noen gang å vise at alternativene fremdeles finnes, lyder det overbevisende argumentet. For variasjonsrikdom er viktig, og det skapes ikke med gjerder og grenser, men gjennom åpenhet og kreativitet der impulser møtes.]]>
Axel Sommerfelt has been an important influence on Norwegian and Scandinavian anthropology, but his contributions are almost unknown. This book brings together some of his critical writings, newly written articles and an interview which positions him in the history of 'North Sea' social anthropology and shows his continued relevance. An Africanist, Sommerfelt did research in Ruwenzori (Uganda and Belgian Congo), but also wrote about the Tallensi (Ghana) and worked for years in Salisbury (Harare) before being evicted by Ian Smith's racist regime in 1966. His contributions to political anthropology, methodology and legal anthropology have a lasting value.
Hva er meningen med livet? Spørsmålet har vært stilt gang på gang, til alle tider og i alle kulturer. I denne bokas syv kapitler nærmer forfatter Thomas Hylland Eriksen seg spørsmålet, og gir ikke ett, men mange ulike svar. «Ingen fornuftige mennesker har noen gang trodd at livets mening dreier seg om å skaffe seg så mange ting som mulig», skriver Thomas Hylland Eriksen i denne boka, og tilføyer: «I en viss forstand er vi fremdeles like utenfor huleåpningen, eller på torget i Aten, eller under banyantreet, i lotusstilling, foran Gautama Buddhas føtter.» Menneskeheten har gjort enorme fremskritt innen teknologi og vitenskap, men når det gjelder spørsmål om livets mening og det gode samfunn, er vi samtidige med alle mennesker som har levd. Derfor har vi noe å lære av både urfolkene uten skrift og stat, antikkens tenkere og streberne på hamsterhjulet. Thomas Hylland Eriksen Eriksen høster innsikter fra alle. Denne boka er et destillat av seksti års væren i en verden som er blitt større for hvert år. Det hender riktignok at forfatteren ikke gir svar, men i så fall er han i det minste i nærheten av spørsmålet.
This concise introduction to social and cultural anthropology has become a modern classic, revealing the rich global variation in social life and culture. The text provides a clear overview of anthropology, focusing on central topics such as kinship, ethnicity, ritual and political systems, offering a wealth of examples that demonstrate the enormous scope of anthropology and the importance of a comparative perspective. Unlike other texts on the subject, Small Places, Large Issues incorporates the anthropology of complex modern societies. Using reviews of key monographs to illustrate his argument, Eriksen's lucid and accessible text remains an established introductory text in anthropology.This new edition is updated throughout and increases the emphasis on the interdependence of human worlds. There is a new discussion of the new influence cultural studies and natural science on anthropology. Effortless bridging the perceived gap between "e;classic"e; and "e;contemporary"e; anthropology, Small Places, Large Issues is as essential to anthropology undergraduates as ever.
Boka nærmer seg spørsmålet om menneskets synsvinkel fra ei rekke ulike synsvinkler. Biologen Dag Hessen tar for seg biologiens verden, fra genetikken til økosystemene, og ser på forholdet mellom egoisme og samarbeid på de ulike nivåene. Sosialantropologen Thomas Hylland Eriksen tar leseren med på ei rundreise i verdens kulturelle mangfold, og spør om det finnes noen fellestrekk som tyder på at mennesket er den fødte egoist.
Boken gir en diagnose av den oppjagede tiden vi lever i. Den viser sammenhengene mellom blant annet ungdomsdyrking og såpeoperaer, e-post og konkurranseutsatthet, utbrenthet og ny teknologi. Den viser også at noe er i ferd med å gå galt. Tilgjengeligheten nærmer seg hundre prosent; nå er det utilgjengeligheten vi må slåss for.
An anthropological study of a community 'marinated' in fossil fuels, fraught by ambivalence and conflict.
Looking at why the discipline has not gained the popularity and respect it deserves in the twenty-first century, this title takes the anthropological community to task for its unwillingness to engage more proactively with the media in a wide range of debates. It makes a plea for positioning anthropology as the universal intellectual discipline.
The world is overheated. Too full and too fast; uneven and unequal. It is the age of the Anthropocene, of humanity's indelible mark upon the planet. In short, it is globalisation - but not as we know it.*BR**BR*In this groundbreaking book, Thomas Hylland Eriksen breathes new life into the discussion around global modernity, bringing an anthropologist's approach to bear on the three interrelated crises of environment, economy and identity. He argues that although these crises are global in scope, they are perceived and responded to locally, and that contradictions abound between the standardising forces of information-age global capitalism and the socially embedded nature of people and local practices.*BR**BR*Carefully synthesising the ethnographic and comparative methods of anthropology with macrosocial and historical material, Overheating offers an innovative new perspective on issues including energy use, urbanisation, deprivation, human (im)mobility, and the spread of interconnected, wireless information technology.
Fredrik Barth is one of the towering figures of twentieth-century anthropology. This intellectual history traces the development of Barth's ideas and explores the substance of his contributions. In an accessible style, Thomas Hylland Eriksen's biographical study reveals the magic of ethnography to professional anthropologists and non-practitioners alike. *BR**BR*Exploring his six decade career, it follows Barth from early ecological studies in Pakistan, to political studies in Iran, to groundbreaking fieldwork in Norway, New Guinea, Bali and Bhutan. Eriksen argues that Barth's voracious appetite for fieldwork holds the key to understanding his remarkable intellectual development and the insights it produced. The book raises many of the same questions that emerge from Barth's own work - of unity and diversity, of culture and relativism, of art and science.
This is the first book to cover the entire history of social and cultural anthropology in a single volume. Beginning with a summary of the discipline in the nineteenth century, exploring major figures such as Morgan and Tylor, it goes on to provide a comprehensive overview of the discipline in the twentieth century.The bulk of the book is devoted to themes and controversies characteristic of post First World War anthropology, from structural functionalism via structuralism to hermeneutics, cultural ecology, discourse analysis and, most recently, globalization and postmodernism. The authors emphasise throughout the need to see changes in the discipline in a wider social, political and intellectual context. This is a timely, concise history of a major discipline, in an engaging and thought-provoking narrative, that will appeal to students of anthropology worldwide.
Leading anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen shows how anthropology is a revolutionary way of thinking about the human world. Perfect for students, but also for those who have never encountered anthropology before, this book explores the key issues in an exciting and innovative way. Eriksen explains how to see the world from below and from within - emphasising the importance of adopting an insider's perspective. He reveals how seemingly enormous cultural differences actually conceal the deep unity of humanity. Lucid and accessible, What is Anthropology? draws examples from current affairs as well as anthropological studies. The first section presents the history of anthropology, its unique research methods and some of its central concepts, such as society, culture and translation. Eriksen shows how anthropology helps to shape contemporary thinking and why it is inherently radical. In the second section he discusses core issues in greater detail. Reciprocity, or exchange, or gift-giving, is shown to be the basis of every society. Eriksen examines kinship in traditional societies, and shows why it remains important in complex ones. He argues nature is partly cultural, and explores anthropological views on human nature as well as ecology. He delves into cultural relativism and the problem of understanding others. Finally, he describes the paradoxes of identity - ethnic, national, religious or postmodern, as the case may be.
Is ethnicity a result of cultural differences? Is ethnicity dependent on the practical use and belief in cultural differences? Drawing on a wide-range of classic and recent studies in anthropology and sociology, Thomas Hylland Eriksen examines the relationship between ethnicity, class, gender and nationhood. *BR**BR*Using the question 'What is ethnicity?' as his starting point, Eriksen examines the interplay between ideology and ethnicity, how the Internet impacts understanding of ethnicity, identity politics, and the commercialisation of identity. Through this, he reveals that far from being an immutable property of groups, ethnicity is a dynamic and shifting aspect of social relationships. *BR**BR*A core text for all students of social anthropology and related subjects, Ethnicity and Nationalism has been a leading introduction to the field since its original publication in 1993. This new edition - expanded and thoroughly revised - is indispensable to anyone seriously interested in understanding ethnic phenomena.
'While reading Tyranny of the Moment, I found myself both charmed and challenged. The subject is an important one, and Thomas Hylland Eriksen handles it with style, a light touch, and many amiable provocations.' Todd GitlinThe turn of the millennium is characterized by exponential growth in everything related to communication - from the internet and email to air traffic. Tyranny of the Moment deals with some of the most perplexing paradoxes of this new information age. Who would have expected that apparently time-saving technology results in time being scarcer than ever? And has this seemingly limitless access to information led to confusion rather than enlightenment?Eriksen argues that slow time - private periods where we are able to think and correspond without interruption - is now one of the most precious resources we have. Since we are theoretically 'online' 24 hours a day, we must fight for the right to be unavailable - the right to live and think more slowly. It is not only that working hours have become longer - Eriksen also shows how the logic of this new information technology has permeated every area of our lives. Exploring phenomena such as the internet, wap telephones, multi- channel television and email, Eriksen examines this non-linear and fragmented way of communicating to reveal how it affects working conditions in the economy, changes in family life and, ultimately, personal identity. Eriksen argues that a culture lacking a sense of its past, and therefore of its future, is effectively static. Although solutions are suggested, he demonstrates that there is no easy way out.
Mauritius is the focus for this study of social identity and political culture. The book seeks to enhance comparative understanding of ethnicity, to refine theories of nationalism, and to contribute to ongoing debates on multiculturalism, identity politics and creolization.
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