Nationalism's Bloody Terrain : Racism, Class Inequality, and the Politics of Recognition
معرفی کتاب «Nationalism's Bloody Terrain : Racism, Class Inequality, and the Politics of Recognition» نوشتهٔ George Baca (editor)، منتشرشده توسط نشر Berghahn Books در سال 2022. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Marcel Mauss (1872-1950), Durkheim's nephew, was a key figure among Durkheimians and helped to found the distinctive French tradition in the social sciences at the start of the 20th century. He dominated the teaching of social anthropology in Paris between the Wars, and his Essay on the Gift (1925) is a well established classic. However, it is only recently that the breadth and freshness of his oeuvre as a whole is being reassessed and is gaining wider appreciation.
Having found inspiration in Mauss's texts for over twenty years, the author here explores not only what he thought but also how his ideas can be developed and applied in new ways. Thus Durkheim and Mauss's notion of primitive classification, often misunderstood, is well exemplified by Indo-European ideology as analysed by Georges Dumezil and current comparativists, and it is argued that this ancient ideology influenced the Durkheimian classification of social facts. Mauss's reflections on kinship and social aggregation point us towards aspects of proto-human societies that are underemphasized by contemporary palaeoanthropology, and his vision of world history in terms of emic categories - fundamental ideas such as person, space, totality, substance - casts new light on much we take for granted, as well as on The Gift. Mauss specialized in religion, and his treatment of the rubric goes beyond his uncle's unitary definition in terms of the sacred.
In assembling and presenting his essays on this intellectual giant, the author tries both to convey the range and quality of Mauss's mind and to take further his scattered and partial insights.
Contents Introduction: Politics of Recognition and Myths of Race Narrating a Nation through Mixed Bloods The Making and Unmaking(?) of a Malay Race What’s Love Got to Do with It? The Race of Freedom and the Drag of Descent The Politics of Moral Order: A Brief Anatomy of Racing Second-Hand Dreams Disappearing Act: Race and the Neo-liberal State The End of Social Construction: What Comes Next? Notes on Contributors At the time of this writing, the world is watching incredulously as terror and deprivation ravage the poorest citizens of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.