
The Fuzzy Logic of Encounter
New Perspectives on Cultural Contact
Waxmann (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published in March 2009
Book
Paperback/Softback
232 pages
978-3-8309-2124-0 (ISBN)
Description
How can we describe cultural contact adequately? The Fuzzy Logic of Encounter presents a series of essays reflecting the growing dissatisfaction with dualistic concepts which ignore the complex situations resulting from the European expansion and subsequent historical developments. This intellectual shift is exemplified by a new awareness, in various fields of scholarship, for phenomena of "impurity", such as the use of slightly disharmonious microtones in Indian music, the North American "wampum" (shell beads) as an ambivalent cultural signifier, or archaeological artefacts as embodiments of semantic complexity. The essays share a common critical concern with the consequences of spatial mobility, cultural amalgamation, and changing cultural affiliations. They seek to introduce a new, positive attitude toward blurred or fuzzy cultural products and boundaries which enables us to take account of entanglement, ambiguity, and mutual impact. The volume includes a variety of disciplinary perspectives ranging from ethnography, historiography, and religious studies to literature, archaeology, and musicology.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Munster
Germany
Target group
College/higher education
Edition type
New edition
Dimensions
Height: 24 cm
Width: 17 cm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
446 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-8309-2124-0 (9783830921240)
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Editor
Sünne Juterczenka, Dr., is a Historian and currently holds a post doctoral research fellowship at the Graduate Center for the Study of Culture at the Justus-Liebig-University in Gießen, Germany.
Gesa Mackenthun is Professor of American Studies at Rostock University, Germany. Her publications include Fictions of the Black Atlantic in American Foundational Literature (2004), Metaphors of Dispossession. American Beginnings and the Translation of Empire, 1492-1637 (1997), and Sea Changes. Historicizing the Ocean (co-edited with Bernhard Klein, 2004). In 2006, she founded the graduate school "Cultural Encounters and the Discourses of Scholarship" at Rostock University (German Research Foundation) and has co-edited seven research volumes on various aspects of this problematic (including Entangled Knowledge. Scientific Discourses and Cultural Difference, 2012, and Fugitive Knowledge, 2015). Her current research deals with nineteenth-century travel and archaeology and the scientific construction of American antiquity.