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Title Social beings, future belongings : reimagining the social / edited by Anna Tsalapatanis [and three others]
Published Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2019
©2019

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Description 1 online resource (165 pages)
Series Sociological Futures
Sociological futures.
Contents Cover; Half Title; Series Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of figures; Notes on contributors; Introduction: belonging unbound; Part I: toils; Part II: intensities; Part III: promises; Belonging in academia; References; Part I: Toils; 1 Naming belonging: when national vocabularies fail; Introduction; Belonging and its conflation with identity; The asymmetry of belonging and the national; The asymmetry of belonging defined by us and others; Naming, being named and its consequences for belonging; Not being from here: rupture, othering and double alienation
Taxonomies of belongingConclusion; References; 2 'Their time and their story': inscribing belonging through life narratives and role expectations in wedding videography; Introduction; Conclusion; Note; References; 3 Academics anonymous: blogging and feminist 'be/longings' in the neoliberal university; Introduction; Belonging in the academy as a feminist killjoy; Blogging, belonging and everyday activism; Calling out sexism; Speaking into the silence; Humour and belonging; Conclusion; References; Part II: Intensities; 4 Transforming belongings in Guantánamo Bay; Previous studies
An intensive approachFleshing out the enactments of subject status in Guantánamo Bay; Conclusion; Notes; References; 5 Belonging in the future?; Introduction; The neglected future temporality of belonging; Belonging and place: putting down roots as future-oriented; When anticipation turns to open-ended waiting; Concluding thoughts: belonging in the (un)making?; Notes; References; 6 Costumes of belonging: 'fitting in' circus fabrics in the novels The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith by Peter Carey and The Pilo Family Circus by Will Elliott, and the costume-cum-body art of Leigh Bowery
'Case study' 1: a Trojan rodent'Case study' 2: rocket fuel for the body; 'Case study' 3: costume-cum-body art; Costume-cum-bodies of belonging -- conclusion on somatic hyperboles and physicus fiction; Notes; References; Part III: Promises; 7 Beyond human (un)belonging: intimacies and the impersonal in Black Mirror; Introduction; Desiring a human future; Black Mirror and bad intimacy; Individuation, the impersonal and intimacy; Rethinking intimacy with impersonality; Impersonal futures; Note; References; 8 Belonging, place and identity in the twenty-first century; Introduction; Uprooting
BackgroundChanging transitions to adulthood; Class, place and belonging; Subversion, symbolic violence and habitus clivé; Conclusion; Notes; References; 9 Femininity isn't femme: appearance and the contradictory space of queer femme belonging; Introduction; Defining the utopic femme online; Embodying femme offline; Conclusion; References; Index
Summary Social Beings, Future Belongings is a collection of sociological essays that address an increasingly relevant matter: what does belonging look like in thetwenty-first century? The book critically explores the concept of belonging and how it can respond to contemporary problems in not only the traditional domains of citizenship and migration, but also in detention practices, queer and feminist politics, Australian literature and fashion, technology, housing and rituals. Drawing on examples from Australia, Europe, the United Kingdom and the United States, each topic is examined as a different kind of problem for the future- as a toil, an intensity or a promise. Ultimately, the collection argues that creating new ways to belong in contemporary times means reimagining the traditional terms on which belonging can happen, as well as the social itself. Read on their own, eachchapter presents a compelling case study and develops a set of critical tools for encountering the empirical, epistemological and ontological challenges we face today. Read together, they present a diverse imagination that is capable of answering the question of belonging in, to and with the future. Social Beings, Future Belongings shows how belonging is not a static and universal state, but a contingent, emergent and ongoing future-oriented set of practices. Balancing empirical and theoretical work, this book will appeal to researchers, students and practitioners alike
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Anna Tsalapatanis is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies at the University of Oxford. She received her PhD in Sociology from the Australian National University and her research interests include citizenship as status, bureaucracy and identity. Miranda Bruce is a PhD candidate in the School of Sociology at the Australian National University, writing on the 'Internet of Things: its history, discourse, logic, and implications for how we understand time, technology and the future'. She has published in the Australian Humanities Review and developed and convened advanced university courses. David Bissell is an Associate Professor and Australian Research Council Future Fellow in the School of Geography at the University of Melbourne. He is author of Transit Life: How Commuting is Transforming our Cities (2018), and co-editor of Stillness in a Mobile World (2011) and the Routledge Handbook of Mobilities (2014). Helen Keane is an Associate Professor in the School of Sociology at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia. Her research focuses on drug and alcohol use, including pharmaceutical, recreational and illicit drugs (and the relationships between these categories and forms of use). She is the co-author of Habits: Remaking Addiction(2014) with Suzanne Fraser and David Moore
Online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on May 13, 2019)
Subject Group identity.
Belonging (Social psychology)
group identity.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Sociology -- General.
Belonging (Social psychology)
Group identity
Form Electronic book
Author Tsalapatanis, Anna, 1986- editor.
Bruce, Miranda, editor
Keane, Helen, 1964- editor.
ISBN 9781315200859
1315200856
9781351780315
135178031X
9781351780292
1351780298
9781351780308
1351780301