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E-raamat: Knowing Your Place: Rural Identity and Cultural Hierarchy

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  • Formaat: 285 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jan-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136048302
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  • Formaat: 285 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jan-2013
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781136048302

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Bringing together noted anthropologists and literary scholars, Knowing Your Place explores rural identity in a number of cultures and situations. Essays examine the distinction between popular and high culture, the explosion of high technology, the impact of environmental policy, the role of labor in the global marketplace, museum representations, and postcolonial politics. Throughout, the essays address the many ways in which place identity alters and influences the experiences of race, class, gender, ethnicity, and nationality.

Knowing Your Place directs groundbreaking attention to the role of rural and urban places in identity construction. Written to redress the longstanding neglect and denigration of the rural, this book argues that the cultural dominance of the city has been reinforced by postmodern theory's near fixation on the urban and the sophisticated.

The essays explore rural identity in a number of cultures and situations, and look at issues of contemporary interest. Topics covered include the uses of popular and high culture, the explosion of high technology, the social and economic impact of ecological policy, the role of labor in the global marketplace, museum curatorship, and post-colonial politics. Throughout, the essays address the many ways in which place identity alters and influences the experience of race, class, gender and ethnicity.

Arvustused

"The "Introduction" by editors Barbara Ching and Gerald Creed is worth the price of the book. Ching and Creed argue that there is a "culturally valuable rusticity" that must be identified and explored by scholars because of its great shaping power in human behavior and experience." -- H-Rural Book Review

INTRODUCTION ~ Recognizing Rusticity, Gerald W. Creed, Barbara Ching;
Chapter 1 ~ Rurality and Racial Landscapes in Trinidad, Aisha Khan;
Chapter
2 ~ Is It True What They Say About Dixie?, William J. Maxwell;
Chapter 3 ~
Ain't It Funny How Time Slips Away?, Aaron A. Fox;
Chapter 4 ~ Campesinos
and Técnicos, Marc Edelman;
Chapter 5 ~ Class, Gender, and the Rural in
James Joyce's The Dead, Elizabeth A. Sheehan;
Chapter 6 ~ The Roman du
Terroir au Féminin in Quebec, Beatrice Guenther;
Chapter 7 ~ Rurality,
Rusticity, and Contested Identity Politics in Brittany, DavidMaynard;
Chapter
8 ~ The Rise and Fall of Peasantry as a Culturally Constructed National
Elite in Israel, Susan H.Lees;
Chapter 9 ~ The Alpine Landscape in Australian
Mythologies of Ecology and Nation, MichÈle D. Dominy; CONTRIBUTORS; Index;
Gerald Creed is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Hunter College and the Graduate School of the City University of New York. Barbara Ching is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Memphis.