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Academics and policy makers have grown increasingly interested in
the ways that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) may encourage
better governance, democratic politics, and perhaps ultimately a
global civil society. In Civil Life, Globalization and Political
Change in Asia, Robert Weller has brought together an international
group of experts on the subject, whose chapters address these
questions through a series of extensive case studies from East and
Southeast Asia including Japan, China, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong
Kong, Singapore, Indonesia and Vietnam.
Academics and policy makers have grown increasingly interested in
the ways that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) may encourage
better governance, democratic politics, and perhaps ultimately a
global civil society. However, critics of these organizations have
pointed out that NGOs tend to be undemocratic in their internal
politics, they speak for groups of people to whom they are not
accountable through elections or financial support and they often
represent the interests of people in wealthy countries at the
expense of truly indigenous people. The main questions revolve
around whether, and how NGOs actually lead to democratization, and
the ways in which NGOs relate to broader global forces.
In "Civil Society, Globalization and Political Change in Asia,"
Robert Weller has brought together an international group of
experts on the subject whose chapters address these questions
through a series of extensive case studies from east and southeast
Asia including Japan, China, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong,
Singapore, Indonesia and Vietnam.
Written by eleven leading anthropologists from around the world,
this volume extends the insights of Fredrik Barth, one of the most
important anthropologists of the twentieth century, to push even
further at the frontiers of anthropology and honor his memory. As a
collection, the chapters thus expand Barth's pioneering work on
values, further develop his insights on human agency and its
potential creativity, as well as continuing to develop the
relevance for his work as a way of thinking about and beyond the
state. The work is grounded on his insistence that theory should
grow only from observed life.
Written by eleven leading anthropologists from around the world,
this volume extends the insights of Fredrik Barth, one of the most
important anthropologists of the twentieth century, to push even
further at the frontiers of anthropology and honor his memory. As a
collection, the chapters thus expand Barth's pioneering work on
values, further develop his insights on human agency and its
potential creativity, as well as continuing to develop the
relevance for his work as a way of thinking about and beyond the
state. The work is grounded on his insistence that theory should
grow only from observed life.
Free markets alone do not work effectively to solve certain kinds
of human problems, such as education, old age care, or disaster
relief. Nor have markets ever been the sole solution to the
psychological challenges of death, suffering, or injustice.
Instead, we find a major role for the non-market institutions of
society - the family, the state, and social institutions. The first
in-depth anthropological study of charities in contemporary Chinese
societies, this book focuses on the unique ways that religious
groups have helped to solve the problems of social well-being.
Using comparative case studies in China, Taiwan and Malaysia during
the 1980s and onwards, it identifies new forms of religious
philanthropy as well as new ideas of social 'good', including
different forms of political merit-making, new forms of civic
selfhood, and the rise of innovative social forms, including
increased leadership by women. The book finally argues that the
spread of these ideas is an incomplete process, with many
alternative notions of goodness continuing to be influential.
In their third book together, Adam B. Seligman and Robert P. Weller
address a seemingly simple question: What counts as the same? Given
the myriad differences that divide one individual from another, why
do we recognize anyone as somehow sharing a common fate with us?
For that matter, how do we live in harmony with groups who may not
share the sense of a common fate? Such relationships lie at the
heart of the problems of pluralism that increasingly face so much
of the world today. Note that "counting as" the same differs from
"being" the same. Counting as the same is not an empirical question
about how much or how little one person shares with another or one
event shares with a previous event. Nothing is actually the same.
That is why, as humans, we construct sameness all the time. In the
process, of course, we also construct difference. Creating sameness
and difference leaves us with the perennial problem of how to live
with difference instead of seeing it as a threat. How Things Count
as the Same suggests that there are multiple ways in which we can
count things as the same, and that each of them fosters different
kinds of group dynamics and different sets of benefits and risks
for the creation of plural societies. While there might be many
ways to understand how people construct sameness, three stand out
as especially important and form the focus of the book's analysis:
Memory, Mimesis, and Metaphor.
Robert P. Weller's richly documented account describes the
extraordinary transformations which have taken place in Chinese and
Taiwanese responses to the environment across the twentieth
century. Indeed, both places can be said to have 'discovered' a new
concept of nature. The book focuses on nature tourism,
anti-pollution movements, and policy implementation to show how the
global spread of western ideas about nature has interacted with
Chinese traditions. Inevitably differences of understanding across
groups have caused problems in administering environmental reforms.
They will have to be resolved if the dynamic transformations of the
1980s are to be maintained in the twenty-first century. In spite of
a century of independent political development, a comparison
between China and Taiwan reveals surprising similarities, showing
how globalization and shared cultural traditions have outweighed
political differences in shaping their environments. The book will
appeal to a broad readership from scholars of Asia, to
environmentalists, and anthropologists.
How can we order the world while accepting its enduring
ambiguities? Rethinking Pluralism suggests a new approach to the
problem of ambiguity and social order, which goes beyond the
default modern position of 'notation' (resort to rules and
categories to disambiguate). The book argues that alternative, more
particularistic modes of dealing with ambiguity through ritual and
shared experience better attune to contemporary problems of living
with difference. It retrieves key aspects of earlier discussions of
ambiguity evident in rabbinic commentaries, Chinese texts, and
Greek philosophical and dramatic works, and applies those texts to
modern problems. The book is a work of recuperation that challenges
contemporary constructions of tradition and modernity. In this, it
draws on the tradition of pragmatism in American philosophy,
especially John Dewey's injunctions to heed the particular, the
contingent and experienced as opposed to the abstract, general and
disembodied. Only in this way can new forms of empathy emerge
congruent with the deeply plural nature of our present experience.
While we cannot avoid the ambiguities inherent to the categories
through which we construct our world, the book urges us to
reconceptualize the ways in which we think about boundaries - not
just the solid line of notation, but also the permeable membrane of
ritualization and the fractal complexity of shared experience.
Robert P. Weller's richly documented account describes the
extraordinary transformations which have taken place in Chinese and
Taiwanese responses to the environment across the twentieth
century. Indeed, both places can be said to have 'discovered' a new
concept of nature. The book focuses on nature tourism,
anti-pollution movements, and policy implementation to show how the
global spread of western ideas about nature has interacted with
Chinese traditions. Inevitably differences of understanding across
groups have caused problems in administering environmental reforms.
They will have to be resolved if the dynamic transformations of the
1980s are to be maintained in the twenty-first century. In spite of
a century of independent political development, a comparison
between China and Taiwan reveals surprising similarities, showing
how globalization and shared cultural traditions have outweighed
political differences in shaping their environments. The book will
appeal to a broad readership from scholars of Asia, to
environmentalists, and anthropologists.
How can we order the world while accepting its enduring
ambiguities? Rethinking Pluralism suggests a new approach to the
problem of ambiguity and social order, which goes beyond the
default modern position of 'notation' (resort to rules and
categories to disambiguate). The book argues that alternative, more
particularistic modes of dealing with ambiguity through ritual and
shared experience better attune to contemporary problems of living
with difference. It retrieves key aspects of earlier discussions of
ambiguity evident in rabbinic commentaries, Chinese texts, and
Greek philosophical and dramatic works, and applies those texts to
modern problems. The book is a work of recuperation that challenges
contemporary constructions of tradition and modernity. In this, it
draws on the tradition of pragmatism in American philosophy,
especially John Dewey's injunctions to heed the particular, the
contingent and experienced as opposed to the abstract, general and
disembodied. Only in this way can new forms of empathy emerge
congruent with the deeply plural nature of our present experience.
While we cannot avoid the ambiguities inherent to the categories
through which we construct our world, the book urges us to
reconceptualize the ways in which we think about boundaries - not
just the solid line of notation, but also the permeable membrane of
ritualization and the fractal complexity of shared experience.
This pioneering, interdisciplinary work shows how rituals allow us
to live in a perennially imperfect world. Drawing on a variety of
cultural settings, the authors utilize psychoanalytic and
anthropological perspectives to describe how ritual--like
play--creates "as if" worlds, rooted in the imaginative capacity of
the human mind to create a subjunctive universe. The ability to
cross between imagined worlds is central to the human capacity for
empathy. Ritual, they claim, defines the boundaries of these
imagined worlds, including those of empathy and other realms of
human creativity, such as music, architecture and literature.
The authors juxtapose this ritual orientation to a "sincere"
search for unity and wholeness. The sincere world sees
fragmentation and incoherence as signs of inauthenticity that must
be overcome. Our modern world has accepted the sincere viewpoint at
the expense of ritual, dismissing ritual as mere convention. In
response, the authors show how the conventions of ritual allow us
to live together in a broken world. Ritual is work, endless work.
But it is among the most important things that we humans do.
In their third book together, Adam B. Seligman and Robert P. Weller
address a seemingly simple question: What counts as the same? Given
the myriad differences that divide one individual from another, why
do we recognize anyone as somehow sharing a common fate with us?
For that matter, how do we live in harmony with groups who may not
share the sense of a common fate? Such relationships lie at the
heart of the problems of pluralism that increasingly face so much
of the world today. Note that "counting as" the same differs from
"being" the same. Counting as the same is not an empirical question
about how much or how little one person shares with another or one
event shares with a previous event. Nothing is actually the same.
That is why, as humans, we construct sameness all the time. In the
process, of course, we also construct difference. Creating sameness
and difference leaves us with the perennial problem of how to live
with difference instead of seeing it as a threat. How Things Count
as the Same suggests that there are multiple ways in which we can
count things as the same, and that each of them fosters different
kinds of group dynamics and different sets of benefits and risks
for the creation of plural societies. While there might be many
ways to understand how people construct sameness, three stand out
as especially important and form the focus of the book's analysis:
Memory, Mimesis, and Metaphor.
Ritual is usually understood as pointing to some essence beyond the
ritual act itself. This ambitious interdisciplinary study offers a
convincing challenge to this understanding. The authors begin by
seeking to explain how the conventional idea arose in the first
place. They locate its origin in a post-Protestant and
post-Enlightenment vision of ritual action that emphasizes rituals
as merely external signs of interior states. This approach, say the
authors, is part of a far larger way of relating to the self and to
the world, which they label "sincerity." But ritual, they say, is
the very opposite of sincerity because it consists of stylized,
repetitive interactions that construct an "as if" world, a world of
role, propriety, play, and even fantasy, rather than pointing to
the world as it actually is. In fact, that is ritual's great
contribution. Ritual modes of behavior make a shared social world
possible by helping to navigate between diverse people and groups,
rather than attempting to transcend and efface boundaries. After
setting forth this argument, the authors go on to build on it by
showing how sincerity and ritual are stand-ins for two very
different ways of being in the world. Although both modes are
always present to some degree, modernity has deeply privileged
sincerity and authenticity. And, they say, we are now paying a
heavy price for this extreme and often totalizing projection of
personality in contemporary political life.
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