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Humanness supposes innate and profound reflexivity. This volume approaches the concept of reflexivity on two different yet related analytical planes. Whether implicitly or explicitly, both planes of thought bear critically on reflexivity in relation to the nature of selfhood and the very idea of the autonomous individual, ethics, and humanness, science as such and social science, ontological dualism and fundamental ambiguity. On the one plane, a collection of original and innovative ethnographically based essays is offered, each of which is devoted to ways in which reflexivity plays a fundamental role in human social life and the study of it; on the other-anthropo-philosophical and developed in the volume's Preface, Introduction, and Postscript-it is argued that reflexivity distinguishes-definitively, albeit relatively-the being and becoming of the human.
Table des matières
Preface Terry Evens, Don Handelman, and Christopher Roberts Introduction: Reflexivity and Selfhood
Terry Evens, Don Handelman, and Christopher Roberts SECTION I: REFLEXIVITY, SOCIAL SCIENCE, AND ETHICS Chapter 1. Is There a Difference between Doing Good and Doing Good Research: Anthropology and Social Activism, or the Productive Limits of Reflexivity
Terry Evens Chapter 2. The Ethic of Being Wrong: Taking Levinas into the Field
Don Handelman Chapter 3. Cosmopolitan Reflexivity: Consciousness and the Non-Locality of Ritual Meaning
Koenraad Stroeken Chapter 4. Religionist Reflexivity and the Machiavellian Believer
Christopher Roberts SECTION II: REFLEXIVITY, PRACTICE, AND EMBODIMENT Chapter 5. Wittgenstein's Critique of Representation and the Ethical Reflexivity of Anthropological Discourse
Horacio Ortiz Chapter 6. Human Cockfighting in the Squared Circle: Thai Boxing as a Matter of Reflexivity
Paul Schissel Chapter 7. Perfect Praxis in Akido-A Reflexive Body-Self
Einat Bar-On Cohen SECTION III: REFLEXIVITY, SELF, AND OTHER Chapter 8. Tension, Reflection, and Agency in the Life of a Hausa Grain Trader
Paul Clough Chapter 9. Reflexivity in Intersubjective and Intercultural Borderlinking
René Devisch SECTION IV: REFLEXIVITY, DEMOCRACY, AND GOVERNMENT Chapter 10. The Latent Effects of the Distribution of Political Reflexivity in Contemporary Democracies
Yaron Ezrahi Postscript: Reflexivity and Social Science
Terry Evens Index
A propos de l'auteur
Christopher Roberts is Professor of Humanities and Religion at Lewis and Clark College.
Résumé
Humanness supposes innate and profound reflexivity. This volume approaches the concept of reflexivity on two different yet related analytical planes. Whether implicitly or explicitly, both planes of thought bear critically on reflexivity in relation to the nature of selfhood and the very idea of the autonomous individual, ethics, and humanness, science as such and social science, ontological dualism and fundamental ambiguity. On the one plane, a collection of original and innovative ethnographically based essays is offered, each of which is devoted to ways in which reflexivity plays a fundamental role in human social life and the study of it; on the other—anthropo-philosophical and developed in the volume’s Preface, Introduction, and Postscript—it is argued that reflexivity distinguishes—definitively, albeit relatively—the being and becoming of the human.