Fr. 65.00

Smokefree - A Social, Moral and Political Atmosphere

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Although tobacco is a legal substance, many governments around the world have introduced legislation to restrict smoking and access to tobacco products. Smokefree critically examines these changes, from the increasing numbers of places being designated as smokefree to changes in cigarette packaging and the portrayal of smoking in popular culture.

List of contents

Orienting Notes: Ethnographic Vignettes from a Fascinating AtmosphereIntroduction: There's Something in the AirPart I1. The Difference Between Tobacco and Tomatoes2. Oppositionary Pairings and Ruinous Smoke3. Re-imagining the SmokerPart II4. Breathing in Smoke(free), Firsthand5. Miasmatic Exhalation: Breathing Out (Secondhand) Smoke6. Abject Third-hand Smoke7. Fourth-hand Smoke: Going to Flavour CountryConclusionReferencesIndex

About the author

Simone Dennis is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.

Summary

Although tobacco is a legal substance, many governments around the world have introduced legislation to restrict smoking and access to tobacco products. Smokefree critically examines these changes, from the increasing numbers of places being designated as smokefree to changes in cigarette packaging and the portrayal of smoking in popular culture.

Additional text

"Smokefree is a clever exploration of concepts of materiality, embodiment and sensory experience, and boundary crossing, as well as a challenge to apply our methods thoroughly and neutrally even on behaviors of which we disapprove. - Anthropology Review Database - Jack David Eller

Anthropologist Dennis challenges the pervasive anti-smoking agenda of most of anthropology and social science research. Even research that appears to look at smoking from the (recalcitrant) smoker’s point of view in reality is often doing so in service of more finely tailored anti-smoking messages. Dennis uncovers the complexity of smoking in, for example, how smokers experience the trail of smoke as it emanates from their lit cigarettes. Some people tell Dennis that they smoke because of smoking’s now demonized state. Dennis discovers that anti-smoking messages, such as pregnant women smokers giving birth to low weight babies, can be seen as an advantage to women who would like to give birth to small babies. People told Dennis how they mentally countered the graphic public health messages found throughout Australia. Many of Dennis’s findings come from casual conversations with smokers in Australia as they were smoking. Some of the time Dennis was herself smoking, which probably announced to the smoker that Dennis was without judgments. The book’s illustrations and ethnographic content from smokers is effective. Its many discussions of anthropological and philosophical theories make this book best suited to graduate students and scholars. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above. - CHOICE"

Product details

Authors Simone Dennis, Simone (Australian National University Dennis, Simone (Australian National University) Dennis, Dennis Simone
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 25.02.2016
 
EAN 9781472569196
ISBN 978-1-4725-6919-6
No. of pages 216
Series Criminal Practice Series
Subjects Guides > Health
Social sciences, law, business > Sociology > Sociological theories

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