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Still Life: Hopes, Desires and Satisfactions

ISBN: 978-0-745-63646-7

September 2011

Polity

208 pages

Description
How adequate are our theories of globalisation for analysing the worlds we share with others? In this provocative new book, Henrietta Moore asks us to step back and re-examine in a fresh way the interconnections normally labeled 'globalisation'.

Rather than beginning with abstract processes and flows, Moore starts by analyzing the hopes, desires and satisfactions of individuals in their day-to-day lives.  Drawing on a wide range of examples, from African initiation rituals to Japanese anime, from sex in virtual worlds to Schubert songs, Moore develops a theory of the ethical imagination, exploring how ideas about the human subject, and its capacities for self-making and social transformation, form a basis for reconceptualizing the role and significance of culture in a global age. She shows how the ideas of social analysts and ordinary people intertwine and diverge, and argues for an ethics of engagement based on an understanding of the human need to engage with cultural problems and seek social change.

This innovative and challenging book is essential reading for anyone interested in the key debates about culture and globalization in the contemporary world.

About the Author
HENRIETTA L. MOORE is William Wyse Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, and Director of the Culture and Knowledge Program at the Center for Global Governance, London School of Economics.
Features
  • Henrietta Moore is one of the leading theorists of Social Anthropology.
  • This is a very wide-ranging study, drawing on examples from African initiation rituals to Japanese anime, and from sex in virtual worlds to Schubert.
  • The author argues for an ethics of engagement based on an understanding of the human need to engage with cultural problems and seek social change.
  • This absorbing and engaging text will appeal to undergraduates and postgraduate students of globalization, cultural studies and anthropology.