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Land of Strangers

ISBN: 978-0-745-65217-7

March 2012

Polity

200 pages

Description
The impersonality of social relationships in the society of strangers is making majorities increasingly nostalgic for a time of closer personal ties and strong community moorings. The constitutive pluralism and hybridity of modern living in the West is being rejected in an age of heightened anxiety over the future and drummed up aversion towards the stranger. Minorities, migrants and dissidents are expected to stay away, or to conform and integrate, as they come to be framed in an optic of the social as interpersonal or communitarian. Judging these developments as dangerous, this book offers a counter-argument by looking to relations that are not reducible to local or social ties in order to offer new suggestions for living in diversity and for forging a different politics of the stranger.

The book explains the balance between positive and negative public feelings as the synthesis of habits of interaction in varied spaces of collective being, from the workplace and urban space, to intimate publics and tropes of imagined community. The book proposes a series of interventions that make for public being as both unconscious habit and cultivated craft of negotiating difference, radiating civilities of situated attachment and indifference towards the strangeness of others. It is in the labour of cultivating the commons in a variety of ways that Amin finds the elements for a new politics of diversity appropriate for our times, one that takes the stranger as there, unavoidable, an equal claimant on ground that is not pre-allocated.

About the Author
Ash Amin is the 1931 Chair of Geography at the University of Cambridge.
Features
  • A major new book by a leading social and cultural theorist on the renewal of politics in contemporary societies characterized by diversity and difference.
  • Argues against the temptation to look back nostalgically to a time of supposedly close interpersonal ties in the hope that this will enable us to overcome problems of alienation and xenophobia.
  • Argues against the temptation to look back nostalgically to a time of supposedly close interpersonal ties in the hope that this will enable us to overcome problems of alienation and xenophobia.
  • This cutting-edge book will be of great interest to students and scholars in geography, sociology, politics, cultural studies and throughout the humanities and social sciences. It will also be of interest to a wider readership concerned about the renewal of politics in the context of debates about immigration and multiculturalism.