Swimming into the current: the movement of human society though history
Alexander, Catherine; Laterza, Vito; Wardle, Huon; Ortiz, Horacio (2018), Swimming into the current: the movement of human society though history, 15th European Association of Social Anthropology (EASA) Biennial Conference, 2018-08, Stockholm, Sweden
Type
Communication / ConférenceDate
2018Conference title
15th European Association of Social Anthropology (EASA) Biennial ConferenceConference date
2018-08Conference city
StockholmConference country
SwedenMetadata
Show full item recordAuthor(s)
Alexander, CatherineDepartment of Anthropology [Durham University]
Laterza, Vito
Wardle, Huon
Ortiz, Horacio
Institut de Recherche Interdisciplinaire en Sciences Sociales [IRISSO]
Abstract (EN)
This roundtable is inspired on three counts by Keith Hart's ideas of understanding world society and history through people and restoring humanity and human social relations to the study of economy. The first is that we must learn to think of world society and people not as different ends of a scale - big and small - but as co-constitutive. A human life can be the ground from where we launch our investigations into the world. The individual life encompasses worlds and we can read worlds through individual lives. Understanding world history and society through life histories, journeys and migrations uncovers new connections and relations. The second, is to understand how people are connected. Money, currency, is one such critical window onto the dialectical movement between local and global, personal and impersonal with far greater social remit in Hart's approach than that posited by classical economics or, indeed, mainstream anthropology. If we are to study world society and history, imagining new possibilities that do not intensify global inequalities, we must recognise the multiple currents and currencies of people's lives holding worlds together. The third intervention brings these questions into dialogue with Hart's openness to different ways of writing: how should we best cross intellectual boundaries to write the world, unifying perspectives from life, art and science? We will consider how other approaches and disciplines have tackled these issues as method and writing strategy - and how ethnographic writing can learn from, for example, history, literary studies, (auto)biography and fiction.Subjects / Keywords
Keith Hart; anthropology of financeRelated items
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