Skip to product information
1 of 1
Sold Out

Sensing the Everyday

Sensing the Everyday

Paperback

Regular price £44.30
Regular price Sale price £44.30

Join our rewards scheme and earn 132 reward points on this purchase!

Earn 132 points on this!

Sign in or Sign up!
View full details
  • Release Date: 26/03/2019
  • Barcode: 9780367187767
  • Genre: Society & Culture
  • Label: Routledge
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Subgenre: Social Sciences
Sensing the Everyday

Sensing the Everyday

Collapsible content

DESCRIPTION

Dialogues from Austerity Greece.

Sensing the Everyday is a multi-sited ethnographic inquiry based on fieldwork experiences and sharp everyday observations in the era of crisis.

.

Sensing the Everyday is a multi-sited ethnographic inquiry based on fieldwork experiences and sharp everyday observations in the era of crisis. Blending sophisticated theoretical analyses with original ethnographic data, C. Nadia Seremetakis journeys from Greece to Vienna, Edinburgh, Albania, Ireland, and beyond. Social crisis is seen through its transnational multiplication of borders, thresholds and margins, divisions, and localities as linguistic, bodily, sensory, and performative sites of the quotidian in process. The book proposes everyday life not as a sanctuary or as a recessed zone distanced from the structural violence of the state and the market, but as a condition of im/possibility, unable to be lived as such, yet still an encapsulating habitus. There the impossibility of the quotidian is concretized as fragmentary and fragmenting material forces. Seremetakis weaves together topics as diverse as borders and bodies, history and death, the earth and the senses, language and affect, violence and public culture, the sociality of dreaming, and the spatialization of the traumatic, in a journey through antiphonic witnessing and memory. Her montage explores various ways of juxtaposing reality with the irreal and the imaginal to expose the fictioning of social reality. The book locates her approach to ethnography and the ‘native ethnographer’ in wider anthropological and philosophical debates, and proposes a dialogical interfacing of theory and practice, the translation of academic knowledge to public knowledge


DELIVERY & RETURNS

UK Delivery:

  • Free delivery on all orders of £10 or more.
  • £1.49 delivery fee on orders below £10.
  • UK orders are shipped via Royal Mail 2nd Class.

International Delivery:

  • Flat rate delivery charges vary by country.

Dispatch and Delivery Times:

  • All orders are shipped from our warehouse in Northampton, UK within 48 hours of receipt during working hours.
  • UK mainland orders typically arrive within 3-5 working days via Royal Mail 2nd Class.
  • International estimated delivery times:
  • Europe & Channel Islands: 7 to 10 working days
  • USA: 7 to 15 working days
  • Rest of the World: 9 to 21 working days

View our full delivery infomation here.

  • OVER

    2 MILLION PRODUCTS

  • 60 MILLION CUSTOMERS

    ACROSS 190 COUNTRIES