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Self in the World

Connecting Life's Extremes

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“The book contains many jaw-dropping moments. These come from the author’s depth of insight on the brutal logic of globalized apartheid, for instance, or the role of modern universities as bureaucracies for managing national capitalism…Hilarious, sometimes devastating stories are recounted with wit alongside piercing summaries of intellectual works, historical episodes, and speculative, utopian hopes.” • History of Anthropology Review

“This is a work of great originality. Keith Hart has had an unorthodox academic career and it has liberated him in many ways from academic pieties. The book is full of surprises and mind-shifting observations. I actually couldn't put it down.” • Sherry B. Ortner

“For decades, Keith Hart has been our guide through the contradictions and cohabitations that help us become what we are—human, whatever that may come to mean. This remarkable memoir takes the reader on a life’s journey with a purpose and passion to do nothing less than reorganize how we think in and on the world. This is a profoundly hopeful text.” • Bill Maurer

“Here is a fat sandwich with a rich filling that tells his own story as no other anthropologist could: a streetwise journey from Manchester to Paris via Cambridge and a dozen other key locations worldwide. To call it picaresque risks giving the Picaroon pirates a bad name. The young Hart made his name with self-consciously scholarly works where “I had to convert all my stories into the third person”. Now he does the opposite and we get lifelong learning distilled magically into a compelling first-person narrative.” • Peter Clarke

“Keith Hart’s Self in the World is the story of a brilliant and sometimes troubled individual, one of the most creative intellectuals of the last 50 years. It is also a story of anthropology as an intellectual project and vocation; of Africa, anti-colonial struggle, and digital revolution; even of life in Manchester, Paris, and Durban. It is moving, informative, engaging and, indeed, important.” • Craig Calhoun

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The eminent anthropologist Keith Hart reflects on a life of learning, sharing and remembering to offer readers the means of connecting life’s extremes – individual and society, local and global, personal and impersonal dimensions of existence and explores what it is that makes us fully human. Les mer

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The eminent anthropologist Keith Hart reflects on a life of learning, sharing and remembering to offer readers the means of connecting life’s extremes – individual and society, local and global, personal and impersonal dimensions of existence and explores what it is that makes us fully human.

Detaljer

Forlag
Berghahn Books
Innbinding
Innbundet
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
314
ISBN
9781800734203
Utgivelsesår
2022
Format
23 x 15 cm

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«

“The book contains many jaw-dropping moments. These come from the author’s depth of insight on the brutal logic of globalized apartheid, for instance, or the role of modern universities as bureaucracies for managing national capitalism…Hilarious, sometimes devastating stories are recounted with wit alongside piercing summaries of intellectual works, historical episodes, and speculative, utopian hopes.” • History of Anthropology Review

“This is a work of great originality. Keith Hart has had an unorthodox academic career and it has liberated him in many ways from academic pieties. The book is full of surprises and mind-shifting observations. I actually couldn't put it down.” • Sherry B. Ortner

“For decades, Keith Hart has been our guide through the contradictions and cohabitations that help us become what we are—human, whatever that may come to mean. This remarkable memoir takes the reader on a life’s journey with a purpose and passion to do nothing less than reorganize how we think in and on the world. This is a profoundly hopeful text.” • Bill Maurer

“Here is a fat sandwich with a rich filling that tells his own story as no other anthropologist could: a streetwise journey from Manchester to Paris via Cambridge and a dozen other key locations worldwide. To call it picaresque risks giving the Picaroon pirates a bad name. The young Hart made his name with self-consciously scholarly works where “I had to convert all my stories into the third person”. Now he does the opposite and we get lifelong learning distilled magically into a compelling first-person narrative.” • Peter Clarke

“Keith Hart’s Self in the World is the story of a brilliant and sometimes troubled individual, one of the most creative intellectuals of the last 50 years. It is also a story of anthropology as an intellectual project and vocation; of Africa, anti-colonial struggle, and digital revolution; even of life in Manchester, Paris, and Durban. It is moving, informative, engaging and, indeed, important.” • Craig Calhoun

»

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