Results for ' the cultural turn'

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  1.  12
    The Cultural Turn: Empirical Studies and their Implications.Ross Moret - 2019 - Journal of Religious Ethics 47 (1):180-191.
    This essay uses empirical studies to engage Richard Miller’s advocacy of a “cultural turn” in the study of religious ethics found in Friends and Other Strangers. The particular kind of empirical research I highlight here, cultural cognition, emphasizes the ways that belonging to a cultural group influences one’s reasoning when faced with controversial issues involving disputed facts. This approach underscores the significance of the cultural turn, but it also raises some important challenges for Miller’s (...)
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  2. The cultural turn and the cybernetic turn.Laymert Garcia dos Santos - 2007 - In Boaventura de Sousa Santos (ed.), Another knowledge is possible: beyond northern epistemologies. New York: Verso. pp. 151.
     
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  3.  30
    Beyond the Cultural Turn (review).Clifford Geertz - 2002 - Common Knowledge 8 (1):204-205.
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  4.  44
    The Interpretive turn: philosophy, science, culture.David R. Hiley, James Bohman & Richard Shusterman (eds.) - 1991 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
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  5.  43
    The aesthetic turn in sonification towards a social and cultural medium.Stephen Barrass - 2012 - AI and Society 27 (2):177-181.
    The public release of datasets on the internet by government agencies, environmental scientists, political groups and many other organizations has fostered a social practice of data visualization. The audiences have expectations of production values commensurate with their daily experience of professional visual media. At the same time, access to this data has allowed visual designers and artists to apply their skills to what was previously a field dominated by scientists and engineers. The ‘aesthetic turn’ in data visualization has sparked (...)
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  6.  35
    Alterity, Intimacy, and the Cultural Turn in Religious Ethics.Richard B. Miller - 2019 - Journal of Religious Ethics 47 (1):203-216.
    This essay responds to four critics of Friends and Other Strangers: Studies in Religion, Ethics and Culture: Diana Fritz Cates, Eric Gregory, Ross Moret, and Atalia Omer. Focusing on the book’s organizing concepts of intimacy and alterity, engagement with empirical sources, discussion of Augustine’s thought, and attention to moral psychology and political morality, these interlocutors take up various strands in the book’s argument and extend them into metaethical, normative, and metadisciplinary domains. The author organizes his response under three rubrics: Metaethics (...)
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  7.  87
    Jeffrey Alexander and the Cultural Turn in Social Theory.Ron Eyerman - 2004 - Thesis Eleven 79 (1):25-30.
    This paper traces developments in Jeffrey Alexander’s cultural sociology. The aim is to introduce the reader to the key components of this theory as it developed from a functionalist focus on societal values through semiotics and linguistic structuralism to a theory of cultural trauma and collective performance.
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  8.  14
    Landscape Appreciation: Theories since the Cultural Turn.Mara Miller - 2023 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 81 (1):113-116.
    The history of landscape appreciation in the West, and especially in the English-speaking world, has been bound up with the concept of taste. For good reason: t.
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  9.  43
    Backwards to the future: The cultural turn and the wisdom of intellectual history.David D. Hall - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (1):171-184.
    Unlike the memory of the querulous and time-bending White Queen inThrough the Looking Glass, mine befits her complaint, inclined as I am to thinking backwards when asked to contemplate the state of our field. Backwards, then, I go in the first section of this essay, after a few opening comments on the situation of our field at the present moment. Thereafter, I describe the emergence of cultural history and summarize some of its strengths and weaknesses, to the end of (...)
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  10.  22
    Recovering the primitive in the modern: The cultural turn and the origins of cultural sociology.Jeffrey C. Alexander - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 165 (1):10-19.
    This essay provides an intellectual history for the cultural turn that transformed the human sciences in the mid-20th century and led to the creation of cultural sociology in the late 20th century. It does so by conceptualizing and contextualizing the limitations of the binary primitive/modernity. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, leading thinkers – among them Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Freud – confined thinking and feeling styles like ritual, symbolism, totem, and devotional practice to a primitivism (...)
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  11. The tasks of Christian ethics : theology, ethnography, and the conundrums of the cultural turn.Luke Bretherton - 2019 - In Michael Lamb & Brian A. Williams (eds.), Everyday ethics: moral theology and the practices of ordinary life. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press.
     
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  12.  16
    The “Pictorial Turn” as Crisis and the Necessity of a Critique of Visual Culture.Michele Bertolini - 2015 - Philosophy Study 5 (3).
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  13.  25
    The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Vol. 3 of Millenarianism and Messianism in Early Modern European Culture (review).W. Clark Gilpin - 2002 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (4):549-550.
    W. Clark Gilpin - The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Vol. 3 of Millenarianism and Messianism in Early Modern European Culture - Journal of the History of Philosophy 40:4 Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.4 549-550 Book Review The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries James E. Force and Richard H. Popkin, editors. The Millenarian (...)
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  14.  28
    The Cultural-logic Turn of Black Philosophy.James B. Haile - 2015 - Radical Philosophy Review 18 (1):125-146.
    Much of Africana philosophy concerns itself with the social and political; that is, those issues that relate to “racism” or “racialization” as suffered by Africana persons. Within this understanding, Africana persons become defined by and studied through theories which presume a shared anthropology with their white counterparts. This essay argues that Africana philosophy would benefit in thinking beyond “race” and “racialization” towards a theorization of the cultural aspects of Africana persons as the basis of our study and understanding of (...)
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  15. 'The Rush to the Intimate': Counterinsurgency and the Cultural Turn.Derek Gregory - 2008 - Radical Philosophy 150:8.
     
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  16.  32
    Cultural studies and political theory edited by Jodi Dean and culture and economy after the cultural turn edited by Larry Ray and Andrew Sayer.Colin Mooers - 2003 - Historical Materialism 11 (3):215-224.
  17.  12
    Book Review: A glitch in the matrix: Vivek Chibber and the cultural turn[REVIEW]Katie Ebner-Landy - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Chibber’s The Class Matrix and Confronting Capitalism aim to rescue class from the cultural turn. Rather than thinking that mass media mollified the working class, he suggests we re-investigate capitalism itself. We can then see how hard capitalism makes it to take risks for the collective. Chibber’s solution is to shift people from ‘individualistic to solidaristic’ ways of thinking through lived practices, rather than the arts. This review argues, however, that by excluding the culture industry from encouraging solidaristic (...)
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  18.  10
    The Cultural and Spiritual Dimension of Russian Liberalism at the Turn of the Nineteenth/Twentieth Centuries.Veronika L. Sharova - 2022 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 60 (2):153-166.
    This article analyzes the features of the intellectual and cultural environment in which the ideas of late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century liberalism developed. Based on the assumption of l...
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  19.  20
    Visual Culture: The Study of the Visual after the Cultural Turn.E. Winters - 2006 - British Journal of Aesthetics 46 (3):322-323.
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  20.  15
    The epistemological turn in semiotic strategy: From signs in the natural/cultural world to the semantic institutions of academic discourses.You-Zheng Li - 2006 - Semiotica 2006 (162):175-193.
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  21.  5
    Intercultural Theology: Exploring World Christianity after the Cultural Turn. By Judith Gruber. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2018, pp, 195. (A strongly revised translation of Theologie nach dem Cultural Turn, Interkulturalität als Theologische Ressource, W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart, 2013). [REVIEW]James Campbell - forthcoming - Heythrop Journal.
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  22. The Practice Turn in Contemporary Theory.Karin Knorr Cetina, Theodore R. Schatzki & Eike von Savigny (eds.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    This book provides an exciting and diverse philosophical exploration of the role of practice and practices in human activity. It contains original essays and critiques of this philosophical and sociological attempt to move beyond current problematic ways of thinking in the humanities and social sciences. It will be useful across many disciplines, including philosophy, sociology, science, cultural theory, history and anthropology.
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  23.  10
    Hvorfor ikke politisk opprør?Vivek Chibber, The Class Matrix. Social Theory after the Cultural Turn. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press 2022.Vivek Chibber, Confronting Capitalism. How the World Works and How to Change It. London & New York: Verso 2022. [REVIEW]Lars Bugge - 2023 - Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 41 (1):609-624.
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  24.  7
    Intercultural Theology: Exploring World Christianity after the Cultural Turn. By JudithGruber, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2018, pp, 195. (A strongly revised translation of Theologie nach dem Cultural Turn, Interkulturalität als Theologische Ressource, W. Kohlhammer GmbH, Stuttgart, 2013), £44.33. [REVIEW]James Campbell - 2019 - Heythrop Journal 60 (3):461-463.
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  25.  8
    A cultural turn in New Testament studies?Jeremy Punt - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (4):1-7.
    This article considers intersections between cultural studies and New Testament studies. It ponders and focuses on possible approaches to the bearing of the 'cultural turn' on biblical studies. Following a brief consideration of cultural studies and its potential value for New Testament studies, four promising developments in cultural studies approaches to the New Testament are noted.
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  26.  9
    The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Vol. 3 of Millenarianism and Messianism in Early Modern European Culture (review). [REVIEW]W. Clark Gilpin - 2002 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 40 (4):549-550.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 40.4 (2002) 549-550 [Access article in PDF] Book Review The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries James E. Force and Richard H. Popkin, editors. The Millenarian Turn: Millenarian Contexts of Science, Politics, and Everyday Anglo-American Life in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Vol. 3 of Millenarianism and Messianism in Early (...)
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  27. Cultural Turns in Aesthetics and Anti-Aesthetics.Mario Perniola - 2004 - Filozofski Vestnik 25 (2).
    The paper intends to bridge the existing gap between aesthetic knowledge and contemporary society. The first part focuses on the cultural turn in aesthetics, the roots of which can already be found in the English criticism of the eighteenth century. This enterprise is inspired by a methodology that regards aesthetics as a "meeting place" of many disciplines and varying cultural traditions. A second type of cultural turn is carried out by writers (e.g. Baudelaire): the target (...)
     
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  28.  7
    The Therapeutic Turn: How Psychology Altered Western Culture. By Ole Jacob Madsen. Pp. x, 198, Hove, East Sussex/NY, Routledge, 2014, £24.99. [REVIEW]Luke Penkett - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (6):1036-1036.
  29.  72
    The turning point: science, society, and the rising culture.Fritjof Capra - 1983 - New York: Bantam Books.
    "We are trying to apply the concepts of an outdated world view--the mechanistic world view of Cartesian-Newtonian science--to a reality that can no longer be understood in terms of these concepts.
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  30.  4
    Why Is the Culture of Our Times Reminiscent of Lot’s Wife? Causes of the Late-Modern Turn to the Past.Jan Wasiewicz - 2019 - Philosophical Discourses 1:205-221.
    In the first part of the article, the author describes the polymorphic phenomenon of return to the past, which occurs in various areas of culture, social and political, as well as private and family life. Then he points to several key interlocking causes of this phenomenon, such as: working through traumas, democratization of history and memory, compensation of high costs of modernization, uncertainty of the future, searching for an antidote to the progressing identity deficit, commodification of history/memory combined with the (...)
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  31.  42
    Clio’s New Cultural Turn and the Rediscovery of Tradition in Asia.Ying-Shih Yu - 2007 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 6 (1):39-51.
  32.  39
    On making a cultural turn in religious ethics.Richard B. Miller - 2005 - Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (3):409-443.
    This essay critically explores resources and reasons for the study of culture in religious ethics, paying special attention to rhetorics and genres that provide an ethics of ordinary life. I begin by exploring a work in cultural anthropology that poses important questions for comparative and cultural inquiry in an age alert to "otherness," asymmetries of power, the end of value-neutrality in the humanities, and the formation of identity. I deepen my argument by making a foundational case for the (...)
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  33. The Postmodern Turn in Philosophy: Theoretical Provocations and Normative Deficits.Steven Best & Douglas Kellner - unknown
    In the realm of philosophy and other theoretical discourses, there are many different paths to the turn from the modern to the postmodern, representing a complex genealogy of diverse and often divergent trails through different disciplines and cultural terrains. One pathway moves through an irrationalist tradition from romanticism to existentialism to French postmodernism via the figures of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Bataille into the proliferation of French postmodern theory. This is the route charted by Jurgen Habermas in The Philosophical (...)
     
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  34.  64
    Relativism and the Ontological Turn within Anthropology.James Bohman - 2013 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 43 (1):3-23.
    The “ontological turn” is a recent movement within cultural anthropology. Its proponents want to move beyond a representationalist framework, where cultures are treated as systems of belief (concepts, etc.) that provide different perspectives on a single world. Authors who write in this vein move from talk of many cultures to many “worlds,” thus appearing to affirm a form of relativism. We argue that, unlike earlier forms of relativism, the ontological turn in anthropology is not only immune to (...)
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  35. The cultural evolution of prosocial religions.Ara Norenzayan, Azim F. Shariff, Will M. Gervais, Aiyana K. Willard, Rita A. McNamara, Edward Slingerland & Joseph Henrich - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39:e1.
    We develop a cultural evolutionary theory of the origins of prosocial religions and apply it to resolve two puzzles in human psychology and cultural history: (1) the rise of large-scale cooperation among strangers and, simultaneously, (2) the spread of prosocial religions in the last 10–12 millennia. We argue that these two developments were importantly linked and mutually energizing. We explain how a package of culturally evolved religious beliefs and practices characterized by increasingly potent, moralizing, supernatural agents, credible displays (...)
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  36.  46
    Instituting science: the cultural production of scientific disciplines.Timothy Lenoir - 1997 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Early practitioners of the social studies of science turned their attention away from questions of institutionalisation, which had tended to emphasize macrolevel explanations, and attended instead to microstudies of laboratory practice. The author is interested in re-investigating certain aspects of institution formation, notably the formation of scientific, medical, and engineering disciplines. He emphasises the manner in which science as cultural practice is imbricated with other forms of social, political, and even aesthetic practices. The author considers the following topics: the (...)
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  37.  25
    The Linguistic Turn, Social Construction and the Impartial Spectator: why Do these Ideas Matter to Managerial Thinking?Patricia Werhane - 2018 - Philosophy of Management 17 (3):265-278.
    One’s philosophical points of view, which form the bases for assumptions that we bring to management theory and practice matter, and matter deeply, to management thinking and corporate behavior. In this paper I outline three related threads of philosophical conversations and explain how they are important in management theory and practice: the “linguistic turn” in philosophy, deriving from the later writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein, a social constructionist perspective: a set of theories at least implicitly derived from the linguistic (...) in philosophy, and the notion of the impartial spectator. I then use these three theories to analyze the idea of the corporation, corporate cultures and corporate mission statements, stakeholder theories and their differences, and the limitations of the popular notion of “corporate social responsibility.” I conclude that how one frames these management ideas makes a difference, a difference in theory and in practice. (shrink)
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  38.  22
    The Postsecular Turn.Gregor McLennan - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (4):3-20.
    In this article, I engage with three overlapping expressions of the increasingly postsecular cast of social and cultural theory. These currents — guided, respectively, by genealogical critique, neo-vitalist social philosophy and postcolonial anti-historicism — seek to problematize the frame of previous radical theorizing by exposing definite connections between the epistemological and political levels of secular understanding, and by assuming that the nature of those linkages counts heavily against secularism. As well as offering an interpretive overview of these contributions, I (...)
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  39.  14
    The Cultural Politics of Nonhuman Things.Barry Allen - 2011 - Contemporary Pragmatism 8 (1):3-19.
    This article confronts Richard Rorty's idea of cultural politics with Bruno Latour's argument for extending democracy to nonhuman things. Why does Latour make this argument? How many of his assumptions might Rorty share? Quite a few, it turns out. Additionally, ethical integration with nonhumans promises to advance the cosmopolitan politics we require for an effective response to ecological crisis.
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  40.  35
    The Postsecular Turn in Education: Lessons from the Mindfulness Movement and the Revival of Confucian Academies.Jinting Wu & Mario Wenning - 2016 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 35 (6):551-571.
    It is part of a global trend today that new relationships are being forged between religion and society, between spirituality and materiality, giving rise to announcements that we live in a ‘postsecular’ or ‘desecularized’ world. Taking up two educational movements, the mindfulness movement in the West and the revival of Confucian education in China, this paper examines what and how postsecular orientations and sensibilities penetrate educational discourses and practices in different cultural contexts. We compare the two movements to reveal (...)
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  41.  16
    The naturalistic turn in feminist theory: A Marxist-realist contribution.Lena Gunnarsson - 2013 - Feminist Theory 14 (1):3-19.
    After a time dominated by nature-phobia, a naturalistic turn is emerging within feminist theory. Welcoming this new theoretical embrace of nature and sympathising with its insistence that nature is not feminism’s enemy, this article nevertheless points to some problematic features of this turn. Focusing on Elizabeth Grosz’s postmodernist readings of Charles Darwin, I suggest that their emphasis of nature’s dynamic, indeterminate and enabling qualities both implies a politically unmotivated glorification of the dynamic and unruly, and as such obscures (...)
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  42.  27
    Reclaiming the “Cultural Mandate”: The Idea of Sustainable Development in the Kantian Perspective.Vadim A. Chaly - 2023 - Kantian Journal 42 (2):68-94.
    In the Club of Rome report Come on! Capitalism, Short-Termism, Population and the Destruction of the Planet (2018) Kant, along with other “old” Enlighteners, is presented as the father of a world-view which led to the destabilisation of the environment in which humanity exists. The authors of the report argue that the “old Enlightenment” with its individualism, faith in the market and a consumerist attitude to nature should be scrapped. I maintain that this assessment of Kant’s philosophy is groundless and (...)
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  43.  41
    The Affective Turn.Patricia T. Clough - 2008 - Theory, Culture and Society 25 (1):1-22.
  44.  12
    The Culturally Situated Young Romanian Viewer and the New Television.Diana Cotrau - 2004 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 3 (8):23-30.
    Our aim in this paper is to identify the ways in which the new Romanian television has removed itself from its former (communist) status and orienta- tion, and has tuned in to the global media, in turn undergoing changes prompted, on the one hand, by new communication technologies and, on the other hand, by geopolitical changes per se occurring world- wide. We intend to show how the new types of media, particularly television, having interconnected consumers everywhere into a global (...)
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  45.  53
    The critical turn in feminist bioethics: The case of heart transplantation.Margrit Shildrick - 2008 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 1 (1):28-47.
    Given previously successful interventions that already have shaken up the convention, it is puzzling that the feminist critique of bioethics should be slow to embrace the exciting new developments that have emerged in philosophy and critical cultural studies over the last fifteen years or so. Both in the arenas of poststructuralism and postmodernism and in the powerful revival of phenomenological thought, in which the stress on embodiment is highly appropriate to bioethics, there is much that might augment the adequacy (...)
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  46. Relativism and the Ontological Turn within Anthropology.Martin Paleček & Mark Risjord - 2013 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 43 (1):3-23.
    The “ontological turn” is a recent movement within cultural anthropology. Its proponents want to move beyond a representationalist framework, where cultures are treated as systems of belief that provide different perspectives on a single world. Authors who write in this vein move from talk of many cultures to many “worlds,” thus appearing to affirm a form of relativism. We argue that, unlike earlier forms of relativism, the ontological turn in anthropology is not only immune to the arguments (...)
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  47.  10
    The Corporeal Turn: Passion, Necessity, Politics.John Tambornino - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In The Corporeal Turn, political theorist John Tambornino offers a thorough rethinking of ethical and political theory by emphasizing human embodiment, and the primacy of passion and need, in response to the neglect of these matters in much of contemporary thought. Tambornino calls for a 'corporeal turn' or, as he explains, sustained attention to human embodiment—something that is often occluded when priority is given to reason or language. Working through a diverse set of thinkers, exploring such themes as (...)
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  48.  36
    The Complexity Turn.John Urry - 2005 - Theory, Culture and Society 22 (5):1-14.
  49.  32
    "The Culture of Redemption": Marcel Proust and Melanie Klein.Leo Bersani - 1986 - Critical Inquiry 12 (2):399-421.
    What is the redemptive power of art? More fundamentally, what are the assumptions which make it seem natural to think of art as having such powers? In attempting to answer these questions, I will first be turning to Proust, who embodies perhaps more clearly—in a sense, even more crudely—than any other major artist a certain tendency to think of cultural symbolizations in general as essentially reparative. This tendency, which had already been sanctified as a more or less explicit dogma (...)
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  50.  25
    The Cultural Production of Social Movements.Robert F. Carley - 2023 - Springer Verlag.
    The Cultural Production of Social Movements offers a theory of cultural practices, protest tactics, strategic planning and deliberation, and movement organizational structures: “ideological contention.” It is a theory of ideology “from below.” The Cultural Production of Social Movements shows how conflicts—both with external political forces and disagreements, dissensus, and the decision-making process internal to social movements—produce knowledge and meanings that, in turn, impact upon and change the practices that contribute to how social movements are structured and (...)
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