but also see
Friday, September 23, 2016
but also see
Saturday, November 19, 2005
CELEBRATING TRANSGRESSION
CELEBRATING TRANSGRESSION
Method and Politics in Anthropological Studies of Cultures
Editors: Ursula Rao and John Hutnyk
A book in Honour of Klaus Peter Koepping
Transgression is the stock in trade of a certain kind of anthropological sensibility that transforms fieldwork from strict social science to something more engaging. It builds on Koepping’s idea that participation transforms perception and investigates how transgressive practices have triggered the re-theorization of conventional forms of thought and life. It focuses on social practices in various cultural fields including the method and politics of anthropology in order to show how transgressive experiences become relevant for the organisation and understanding of social relations. This book brings key authors in anthropology
together to debate and transgress anthropological expectations. Through transgression as method, as discussed here, our understanding of the world is transformed, and anthropology as a discipline becomes dangerous and relevant again.
Not yet Published (Devember 2005)
256 pages, bibliog., index
ISBN 1-84545-025-6 Hb $48.00/£29.20
Please send orders to:
UK & Europe : Berghahn Books, 3 Newtec
Place,.Magdalen Road, Oxford OX4 1RE, UK
Email : salesuk@berghahnbooks.com
US & Outside Europe : Berghahn Books, 150
Broadway, Ste 812, NY 10038, USA
Email: salesus@berghanhnbooks.com
Available from Berghahn Books
This title and other selected titles are also available to order at 15 % discount from
www.berghahnbooks.com
http://www.berghahnbooks.com/title.php?rowtag=RaoCelebrating
Thursday, September 29, 2005
Diaspora and Hybridity
New Book
Diaspora and Hybridity Authored by:
|
Description:
What do we mean by 'diaspora' and 'hybridity'? Why are they pivotal concepts in contemporary debates on race, culture and society?
This book is an exhaustive, politically inflected, assessment of the key debates on diaspora and hybridity. It relates the topics to contemporary social struggles and cultural contexts, providing the reader with a framework to evaluate and displace the key ideological arguments, theories and narratives deployed in culturalist academic circles today. The authors demonstrate how diaspora and hybridity serve as problematic tools, cutting across traditional boundaries of nations and groups, where trans-national spaces for a range of contested cultural, political and economic outcomes might arise.
Wide ranging, richly illustrated and challenging, it will be of interest to students of cultural studies, sociology, ethnicity and nationalism.
Thursday, September 01, 2005
BAD MARXISM
Bad Marxism: Capitalism and Cultural Studies, Pluto 2004
'Hutnyk packs more dynamite in his sentences than any other writer I know.' Amitava Kumar, Penn State University
Cultural Studies commonly claims to be a radical discipline. This book thinks that's a bad assessment. Cultural theorists love to toy with Marx, but critical thinking seems to fall into obvious traps. / After an introduction which explains why the 'Marxism' of the academy is unrecognisable and largely unrecognised in anti-capitalist struggles, Bad Marxism provides detailed analyses of Cultural Studies' cherished moves by holding fieldwork, archives, empires, hybrids and exchange up against the practical criticism of anti-capitalism. Engaging with the work of key thinkers: Jacques Derrida, James Clifford, Gayatri Spivak, Georges Bataille, Homi Bhabha, Michael Hardt and Toni Negri, Hutnyk concludes by advocating an open Marxism that is both pro-party and pro-critique, while being neither dogmatic, nor dull.
Pluto Press 2004
Wednesday, August 31, 2005
Critique of Exotica
Critique of Exotica: Music, Politics and the Culture Industry
London: Pluto Press, 2000
THE RUMOUR OF CALCUTTA
THE RUMOUR OF CALCUTTA:
TOURISM, CHARITY, AND THE POVERTY OF REPRESENTATION
John Hutnyk 1996 Zed books, London.
An original study in the politics of representation, this book explores the discursive construction of a 'city of intensities'.
The author analyses representations of Calcutta in a wide variety of discourses: in the gossip and travellor-lore of backpackers and volunteer charity workers; in writing - from classic literature to travel guides; in cinema, photography and maps. The book argues that Western Rumours of Calcutta contribute to the elaboration of an imaginary city which circulates in ways fundamental to the maintenance of an international order.
Throughout, the focusis on the technologies of representation which frame tourist experiences of Calcutta, particularly Calcutta as an image site of decay. For example, volunteer charity workers' explanations of their experience fit into a framework which attributes blame locally. In this perspective tourist volunteers cannot acknowledge complicity in its own production of the city as a phantasmagoric space of poverty. Travellers visiting Calcutta are shown to be located in a place through which ideological and hegemonic effects are played out in complex yet coordinated ways which are to be analysed within the context of international privilege and domination. Here specific practices and technologies, of tourism, representation and experience, are intricately combined to reinforce and replicate the conditions of contemporary cultural and economic inequality.
A provocative and original reading of both Heidegger and Marx, the book also draws up on writers as diverse as Spivak, Trinh, Jameson, Clifford, Virilio, Bataille, Derrida, Deleuze and Guattari.
Available from Zed books
7 Cynthia Street, London N1 9JF
Tel 020 7837 4014
Tuesday, August 30, 2005
Travel Worlds
Travel Worlds:
Journeys in Contemporary Cultural Politics
Edited by Raminder Kaur
and John Hutnyk
Zed books, London 1999.
Pb ISBN 1 85649 562 0 Price UK£13.95/US$22.50
(see below for ordering details)
(cover photo Karoki Lewis)
Everyone's got a traveller's tale,
but TRAVEL WORLDS tells them with a sting:
African-American musicians head East for Kung-Fu kicks while
paedophiles go for cheap sex pilgrimage; Western bible-bashers adopt
missionary positions in India while heroic Saint George signs on as
an Arab soldier in Britain; the scars of Partition mock the protocols
of transit, while nomadic insurgents resist the Bangladeshi nation
state with lyrical persuasion; Kula Shaker and Madonna trinketize the
'Orient' while dead tourists exchange values with travelling
'terrorists'; British Mirpuris and Black women travel back to the 'Old
Country' and beyond in ways that are not quite as they seem; and
ethnographers collide with tourists in the carousel of Goa's resorts.
Including poetry and fiction alongside academic essays, this book
refuses simplistic dichotomies of north/south and east/west and
confronts head on existing conventions of writing about travel in
post-colonial, literary and cultural studies. In so doing, it sheds
new light on:
- the shortcomings of border theories and nation-state parameters
- the politics of diasporic and transnational travels
- the relations between tourism and terrorism
- the limitations of 'alternative' tourism
TRAVEL WORLDS plots the politics of diverse journeys;
it is 'something of a travel guide,
something of a hold-all backpack,
and something of another compass'.
`Travel Words dares you to embark on a variety of journeys
simultaneously-from magical-mystical tours that promise to fulfil the
private fantasies of jaded tourists and eager missionaries to new
journeys across old borders that have become terribly real by virtue
of being more psychological than territorial. This collection explores
exciting psycho-geographical spaces through journeys that somewhere
along the way become journeys into the self.' - Ashis Nandy.
In Europe order from Zed books, 7 Cynthia St, London N1 9JF, UK
tel +44 (0)171 837 4014/8466 email: FAROUK@zedbooks.demon.co.uk
In Australia and elsewhere order from our friends at Manic Ex-Posuer: books@manic - http://www.manic.com.au/
In the US: Order from St Martins Press, Scholarly & Reference
Division, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010, USA
tel (212) 982 3900/fax (212) 777 6359 Contact Peter Burrell email: peterburrell@stmartins.com
Dis-Orienting Rhythms:
Dis-Orienting Rhythms: the Politics of the New Asian Dance Music.
eds Sanjay Sharma, John Hutnyk and Ashwani Sharma, 1996 Zed books.The image on the cover is from a Fun^Da^Mental album, Sieze the Time.
Blurring the boundaries between academic and cultural production, this book produces a new understanding of the world significance of South Asian cultural production in multi-racist societies. It writes back the presence of South Asian youth into a rapidy expanding and exuberant youth scene; and celebrates this as a dynamic expression of the experience of South Asian lives with an urgent political consciousness. One of the first sustained attempts to situate such production within the study of race and identity, it uncovers the crucial role that contemporary South Asian dance musics - from Hip-hop, Qawwali and Bhangra through Soul, Indi and Jungle - have played in the formation of a new urban cultural politics.
The book opens by positing new theoretical understandings of South Asian cultural representation that move beyond essentialist, outmoded and overdetermined accounts of ethincity in the cultural studies literature. Contributors then go on to narrate the formation of South Asian expressive culture coming out of the UK in a highly charged political context. Part three takes on the task of historical recovery, looking at the antecedents of political South Asian musical performance, autonomous anti-racist organising and problems of alliance with the white Left. The final part of the book engages with the movements and translations of cultural productions across the world, particularly in the fractured spaces of a postcolonial Britian in decline. In opposing all-too-easy 'world music' categorisations, the contributors also demonstrate throughout how the liberal alibi of multiculturalism can be challenged across the line of music and politics.
The book as a whole points to more productive ways of undertaking cultural study, a pedagogy committed to constructing forms of political engagement that do not reduce popular culture to the scrutinised Other or simply celebrate new expressive cultures as fragmented and hybrid. *For* a Black politics - this book is required reading for students and academics in cultural studies and social theory; as well as for everyone engaged in anti-imperialist, anti-racist struggles.
The image on the cover is from a Fun^Da^Mental album, Sieze the Time.
Zed books
7 Cynthis St, London N1 9JF
Tel. 0171 837 4014
Tuesday, July 19, 2005
Cheap copies of books at Pluto Summer Sale
BAD MARXISM
Capitalism and Cultural Studies
John Hutnyk
Publication Date: June, 2004 / Extent: 264pp / Size: DEMY (215x135mm)
PB: 0745322662 -
Discount offer: �10.99 - $17.00 - �16.00 View Cart
Critical political analysis of how Cultural Studies has used and abused Marxism, offering a close reading of Derrida and Negri. "
and
CRITIQUE OF EXOTICA: Music, Politics and the Culture Industry
John Hutnyk
Publication Date: November, 2000 / Extent: 256pp / Size: DEMY (215x135mm)PB: 0745315496
Discount offer: £5.00 - $9.25 - €7.50 Hutnyk challenges academic complicity in the reification of exotica, cutting through media hype to offer a critique of music, race,
http://www.plutobooks.com/shtml/specialoffers.shtml
.