Buch, Englisch, Band 3, 248 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 368 g
Telling Gypsiness in North East England
Buch, Englisch, Band 3, 248 Seiten, Paperback, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm, Gewicht: 368 g
Reihe: Studies in Public and Applied Anthropology
ISBN: 978-0-85745-147-7
Verlag: Berghahn Books
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
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Book Structure
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Applying Anthropology
PART I: THE WASTELAND
Chapter 1. Defining the Field: People and Practice in an Indeterminate Place
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Boundaries and Meeting Places
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Boundaries and Gypsy Identity
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Schematic Understandings
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Framing Interactions
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Becoming a Person – Embodiedness
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Speaking and the Embodiment of Language
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Summation
Chapter 2. Reaching an Understanding – Methods and Analysis
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Boundaries and the Research Process
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People, Culture and Organizations
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Ethnography at Home
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The Search for the Subject Matter
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Self and Other – More Assumed Boundaries
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Engagement in the Field
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Genealogies and Kinship Charts
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Tales of Everyday Life and Conflicting Moral Frames
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The Significance of Stories The Ethics of Representation
Chapter 3. The Past and Present Making of Teesside: Building a Place in the World, Finding a Place Amongst People
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Arriving Gypsies on Teesside
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The Sites
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A Question of Culture
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Putting Gypsies in Their Place
PART II: THE FIRE
Chapter 4. Stories and Teaching Gypsiness
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An Introduction
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The Intersubjective Process of Socialisation
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Another Introduction
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Learning to Speak – Social Aesthetics and the Context of Socialisation
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Social Aesthetics and Socialisation – the Role of Stories
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Stories and Teaching Gypsy Children
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Telling Stories and Enacting Stories
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The Real World of Stories vs. the Fictional World of Books
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Stories – Real Life or Fiction?
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Stories and Teaching Morality
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‘Fictional’ vs. ‘Real-Life’ Moralities
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Summary
Chapter 5. Stories and the Telling of Family
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Parenting and Teaching
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How to Be
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Family as a Collection of Stories
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A Sense of One’s Beginnings
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Repeated Story Themes
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What’s in a Name?
Chapter 6. Home is Where the Heart Is
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Homing In
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Telling Family Together
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Individual and Family – the Interplay of ‘I’ and ‘We’
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A Variety of Possible Stories
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Where in the World?
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Conclusion
Chapter 7. The Negotiation of Moral Ambivalence
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What’s In and What’s Out – or Who Belongs and Who Doesn’t?
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Making a Place in the World – Rhetoric and Meaning
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Rhetoric, Symbols and Values – Introducing the Inchoate Families
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Real and Imagined – the Idea of a Moral Community
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Rhetoric and the Creation of Social Space
Part II: Summary
PART III: THE DARK
Part III: Introduction
Chapter 8. The Mediated Moral Imagination
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The Character of the Gypsy
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An Unfolding Story
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The Story Continues
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Telling the Story
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‘Our’ Way – the Various Faces of ‘We’ and ‘They’
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Discussion
Chapter 9. A Meeting of Minds?
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Introducing the Characters
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Conflicts and Contradictions – the Meeting’s Internal Processes
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Balancing Individuals and Institutions – How Groups are Made and Remade
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Adopting Roles, Assuming Responsibilities and Assessing Behaviour
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Making a Metaphorical Wasteland
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Discussion
Chapter 10. Managing Multiple Perspectives
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Finding a Point of View – Placing People in a Cultural Landscape
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Enacting and Re-enacting Storylines
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Shifting Perspectives and Enacting Situations
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Conclusions
Conclusions
Appendix 1. Kinship Charts
Appendix 2. Newspaper Cuttings
Bibliography