 |
|
|
|
 |
Returning (to) Communities.
Theory, Culture and Political Practice of the Communal. HERBRECHTER, Stefan and Michael HIGGINS (Eds.)
Amsterdam/New York, NY, 2006, 404 pp.
|
Series: Critical Studies 28
Returning (to) Communities offers an innovative collection of examples and case studies into what has become a hotly disputed topic. The chapters present a wide-ranging series of interventions into the new debates over the concepts and practices of “community” and the communal. For this book, scholars have been gathered from across Europe and Australia as well as from the United States, and several contributors are involved in community practice. Returning (to) Communities is essential reading to researchers and students in social policy, sociology, ethnic studies, cultural analysis, media studies, and across all of the social sciences and humanities concerned with the communal and the collective.
Table of Contents Stefan HERBRECHTER and Michael HIGGINS: Introduction Section One: Conceptualising Communities Richard TYLER: Comprehending Community Ivan CALLUS: Theorising Europe from the Other Shore: Derrida, Community and the Exemplarity of Europe Thomas A. LEWIS: Heterogeneous Community: Beyond New Traditionalism Lou CATON: Stanley Fish meet Jean-Paul Sartre: Community, Difference and Multicultural Theory Ipek DEMIR: Thomas Kuhn’s Construction of Scientific Communities Oleg DOMANOV: Jean-Luc Nancy: An Attempt to Reduce Community to Ontology David BELL: Webs as Pegs Section Two: Communities and Cultural Praxis Antony ADOLF: Multilingualism and its Discontents: Hetero-Lingual Collectivity and the Critique of Homo-Lingual Communities Elizabeth COLEMAN: Cultural Property and Collective Identity Johanna GIBSON: Community in Resources, Tradition in Knowledge Di DRUMMOND: Britain’s Railway Engineers: The First Virtual Global Communities? Eva KINGSEPP: “Nazi fans” but not Neo-Nazis: The Cultural Community of “WWII Fanatics” Jackie MCMILLAN: Putting the Cult Back into Community Nancy THUMIM: Mediated Self-Representations: “Ordinary People” in “Communities” Renée DICKASON: Community and Communities in British Television Ads Bano MURTUJA: The Bubble of Diaspora: Perpetuating “Us” Through Sacred Ideals Section Three: Communities and Political Practice Tammy GRIMSHAW: The Gay “Community:” Stabilising Political Construct or Oppressive Regulatory Regime? Sam HILLYARD: Cull MAFF!: The Mobilisation of the Farming Community During the 2001 Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) Epidemic Paul BAGGULEY and Yasmin HUSSAIN: Conflict and Cohesion: Official Constructions of “Community” Around the 2001 “Riots” in Britain George MORGAN: Aboriginal Politics, Self-Determination and the Rhetoric of Community Marjorie MAYO: Building Heavens, Havens or Hells? Community as Policy in the Context of the Post-Washington Consensus Contributors
|
|