
On the Geopragmatics of Anthropological Identification
Allen Chun(Author)
Berghahn Books (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 1. April 2019
Book
Hardback
174 pages
978-1-78920-203-8 (ISBN)
Description
On the Geopragmatics of Anthropological Identification explores the discursive spaces of our speaking position, or what has routinely been referred to in the literature as the poetics and politics of writing culture. At issue here are its problematic underlying notions of cultural identity, authorial subjectivity and postcolonial critique. Contrary to the widespread assumption that cultural studies and the social sciences share a common discourse of culture and society, Allen Chun argues that 'modern' disciplinary practices and axioms have in fact produced inherently incompatible theories. Anthropology's ethical relativism has also created obstacles for a critical theory of culture and society.
Reviews / Votes
"Allen Chun's book is a wide-ranging, intelligent, critical and required manifesto for a reconfigured anthropology-cultural studies-social sciences." * John Hutnyk, Ton Duc Thang UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Library binding
Illustrations
Bibliography; Index
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 14 mm
Weight
415 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78920-203-8 (9781789202038)
DOI
10.3167/9781789202038
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
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E-Book
04/2019
1st Edition
Berghahn Books
€22.49
Available for download

E-Book
04/2019
1st Edition
Berghahn Books
€22.49
Available for download
Person
Allen Chun was Research Fellow in the Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, Taiwan, and is now Chair Professor in the Institute of Social Research and Cultural Studies, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan. He is the author of two major monographs: Unstructuring Chinese Society: The Fictions of Colonial Practice and the Changing Realities of "Land" in the New Territories of Hong Kong (Routledge, 2000) and Forget Chineseness: On the Geopolitics of Cultural Identification (SUNY Press, 2017).
Content
Preface
Introduction: The Illusion of Anthropological Identity
PART I: ANTHROPOLOGICAL REIFICATIONS FROM ETHNICITY TO IDENTITY
Chapter 1. Toward Identification: The Unconscious Geopolitics of Ethnicity and Culture in Theory
Disenfranchising Concepts from their Disciplinary Mindsets
Reframing Ethnicity, Culture and Identity
Discursive Fictions in the Geopolitics of Modernity, Nation-State, Colonialism, etc.
Pragmatic Crises of Context in the Ecology of Social Process
The Illusion of Identity and the Groundedness of L'Imaginaire
Chapter 2. The Diasporic Mind-field in the (Inter)Disciplinary Politics of Identity
Diaspora as Cultural Phenomenon and Conceptual Problematic
Diaspora as Explanatory or Emancipatory Concept in Disciplinary Perspective
The Japanese 'Diaspora' in Postwar Taiwan
Diasporic Identification as Subjective Positioning
PART II: BEYOND THE IMAGINED COMMUNITY OF WRITING CULTURE
Chapter 3. The Predicament of James Clifford in the Anthropological Imaginary
The New and Newer Ethnography: A Short History of Consciousness
The Fate of Geertz: 'Culture' and Beyond
Chapter 4. Writing Theory: Rethinking the Emancipation of the Author from his Function
Theory, Literarily Speaking: Authorial Subjectivity from Text to Context
Theory as Narrative: The Birth of Society and the Norm from Durkheim to Foucault
The Limits of Imaginative Discourse within the Boundaries of Disciplinary Practices
Unthinking the Disciplines: Steps toward an Ecology of Practice
PART III: CAN THE POSTCOLONIAL SPEAK IN SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY?
Chapter 5. Subaltern Studies as Historical Exception / Postcolonialism as Critical Theory
Postcolonial Theories in the Concrete
The Disciplinary Divide: Why Can't the Post-colonial Speak in Sociological Theory?
Subaltern Studies in the Abstract
Decolonizing the Fog of American Identity: Lessons from Chineseness in Critical Reflexivity
From Historical Exception to Theoretical Exceptionalism
Chapter 6. Nation as Norm, State as Exception: Unseen Ramifications of a Hyphenated Modernity
On Geoffrey Benjamin's (2015 [1985]) Deep Sociology of the Nation-State
The Emergence of the State as Signifying Apparatus in the Practice of Modern Institutions
Governmentality in the Critique of Social Theory, or the Return of Postcolonialism2
Bibliography
Introduction: The Illusion of Anthropological Identity
PART I: ANTHROPOLOGICAL REIFICATIONS FROM ETHNICITY TO IDENTITY
Chapter 1. Toward Identification: The Unconscious Geopolitics of Ethnicity and Culture in Theory
Disenfranchising Concepts from their Disciplinary Mindsets
Reframing Ethnicity, Culture and Identity
Discursive Fictions in the Geopolitics of Modernity, Nation-State, Colonialism, etc.
Pragmatic Crises of Context in the Ecology of Social Process
The Illusion of Identity and the Groundedness of L'Imaginaire
Chapter 2. The Diasporic Mind-field in the (Inter)Disciplinary Politics of Identity
Diaspora as Cultural Phenomenon and Conceptual Problematic
Diaspora as Explanatory or Emancipatory Concept in Disciplinary Perspective
The Japanese 'Diaspora' in Postwar Taiwan
Diasporic Identification as Subjective Positioning
PART II: BEYOND THE IMAGINED COMMUNITY OF WRITING CULTURE
Chapter 3. The Predicament of James Clifford in the Anthropological Imaginary
The New and Newer Ethnography: A Short History of Consciousness
The Fate of Geertz: 'Culture' and Beyond
Chapter 4. Writing Theory: Rethinking the Emancipation of the Author from his Function
Theory, Literarily Speaking: Authorial Subjectivity from Text to Context
Theory as Narrative: The Birth of Society and the Norm from Durkheim to Foucault
The Limits of Imaginative Discourse within the Boundaries of Disciplinary Practices
Unthinking the Disciplines: Steps toward an Ecology of Practice
PART III: CAN THE POSTCOLONIAL SPEAK IN SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY?
Chapter 5. Subaltern Studies as Historical Exception / Postcolonialism as Critical Theory
Postcolonial Theories in the Concrete
The Disciplinary Divide: Why Can't the Post-colonial Speak in Sociological Theory?
Subaltern Studies in the Abstract
Decolonizing the Fog of American Identity: Lessons from Chineseness in Critical Reflexivity
From Historical Exception to Theoretical Exceptionalism
Chapter 6. Nation as Norm, State as Exception: Unseen Ramifications of a Hyphenated Modernity
On Geoffrey Benjamin's (2015 [1985]) Deep Sociology of the Nation-State
The Emergence of the State as Signifying Apparatus in the Practice of Modern Institutions
Governmentality in the Critique of Social Theory, or the Return of Postcolonialism2
Bibliography