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The movement of research animals across the divides that have
separated scientist investigators and research animals as Baconian
dominators and research equipment respectively might well give us
cause to reflect about what we think we know about scientists and
animals and how they relate to and with one another within the
scientific coordinates of the modern research laboratory.
Scientists are often assumed to inhabit the ontotheological domain
that the union of science and technology has produced; to master
'nature' through its ontological transformation. Instrumental
reason is here understood to produce a split between animal and
human being, becoming inextricably intertwined with human
self-preservation. But science itself is beginning to take us back
to nature; science itself is located in the thick of posthuman
biopolitics and is concerned with making more than claims about
human being, and is seeking to arrive at understandings of being as
such. It is no longer relevant to assume that instrumental reason
continues to hold a death grip on science, nor that it is immune
from the concerns in which it is deeply embedded. And, it is no
longer possible to assume that animal human relationships in the
lab continue along the fault line of the Great Divide. This book
raises critical questions about what kinship means, or might mean,
for science, for humanimal relations, and for anthropology, which
has always maintained a sure grip on kinship but has not yet
accounted for how it might be validly claimed to exist between
humanimals in new and emerging contexts of relatedness. It raises
equally important questions about the position of science at the
forefront of new kinships between humans and animals, and questions
our assumptions about how scientific knowing is produced and
reflected upon from within the thick of lab work, and what counts
as 'good science'. Much of it is concerned with the quality of
humanimal relatedness and relationship. For the Love of Lab Rats
will be of great interest to scientists, laboratory workers,
anthropologists, animal studies scholars, posthumanists,
phenomenologists, and all those with an interest in human-animal
relations.
Written by Simone Dennis, Lecturer in Anthropology at the
University of Southern Queensland, Australia, this book illuminates
the social processes of being and becoming emotional and of making
music, and the ways in which these processes are intertwined in the
context of an Australian police department that wields subtle forms
of power by emotional and musical means. The book is based on 18
months of ethnographic fieldwork conducted in a metropolitan police
(concert) band. Of primary analytic concern is the embodied and
social basis of emotion, and its capacity to facilitate connections
between persons in and through musical means. Police Beat moves
away from a focus on the cognitive apparatus that produces
experiences, and which thusly obscure the far more active and
multisensual roles that musicians have in constituting and
organizing their own sensual perceptions, to focus on embodied and
social experiences of making music, and of making emotion. The book
offers new insights into the means and modes of wielding subtle
forms of policing power in the contemporary world, and points to
the importance of music in organizing the social world.
Christmas Island is a small territory of Australia located in the
Indian Ocean. It is home to three main ethnic groups, the smallest
of which are European Australians. Christmas Island is also where
those who arrive "illegally" to seek asylum in Australia are
accommodated. Christmas Island has played a key role in Australian
security, located as it is at the northern extremity of Australian
territory; much closer to Indonesia than to the nation to which it
belongs, and from whose territory it has recently been excised for
migration purposes. As a migration exclusion zone, Christmas is
both within and without of the nation, and has gone from a place
known among nature lovers for its unique red crabs and bird life to
the highly politicised subject of national concern and heated
debate. But what is it like to be at home on Christmas Island? How
do locals make and come to be at home in a place both within and
without of the nation? This anthropological exploration--the very
first one ever undertaken of this strategically important
island--focuses closely on the sensual engagements people have with
place, shows how Christmas Islanders make recourse to the animals,
birds and topographic features of the island to create uniquely
islandic ways of being at home--and ways of creating "others" who
will never belong--under volatile political circumstances. This
original ethnography reveals a complex island society, whose
presence at the very edge of the nation reveals important
information about a place and a group of people new to ethnographic
study. In and through these people and their relationships with
their unique island place, this ethnographic exploration reveals a
nation caught in the grip of intensive national angst about its
borders, its sense of safety, its struggles with multiculturalism,
and its identity in a world of unprecedented migratory movement. As
the first book in the discipline of anthropology to study Christmas
Island in ethnographic terms, Christmas Island is a critical work
for all collections in anthropology and Australian Studies.
"Christmas Island is described by Simone Dennis as 'the last
outpost of the nation', that is, a multicultural microcosm of
contemporary Australia, worried by a search for a national identity
in touch with the past but not limited by it...In Simone Dennis,
Christmas Island has its consummate ethnographer and analyst." -
Professor Nigel Rapport, University of St. Andrews
Mentored to Perfection: The Masculine Terms of Success in Academia
examines how mentoring programs between women tend to replicate the
hierarchical relations of patriarchy that they are meant to
dismantle. Simone Dennis and Alison Behie argue that, while
paradigmatic mentoring programs look like networking support
services for neophytes, these mentorships nevertheless replicate
the very institutional structures they seek to uproot. The
generosity that senior women show to junior women as they share
their tips and offer their support ironically obscures
participants' involvement in debt relations and the biases of
replicating a particular type of success. This book considers the
possibilities for disrupting our tendency to reproduce ourselves in
the masculine terms of success.
This textbook is written by well-established anthropology
professors for, and with, their undergraduate students. It explores
what anthropological thinking is, what anthropological approaches
are, and how these are applied in real-world settings. It provides
a thorough introduction to key methods, theories and the
disciplinary value of contemporary anthropology. This book
deliberately steps beyond the standard textbook format.
Undergraduate students reveal the processes by which they came to
understand and apply anthropological knowledge using everyday
experiences and common life events as examples, while also
showcasing the research that student authors produced as a result
of understanding and operationalising those processes. This fresh
take showcases what can be done with anthropological knowledge, not
what you can do with anthropology when you've achieved the rank of
professor. This book is accompanied by practical exercises, and
podcasts that relate to each of the chapters. Podcasts extend
beyond the textbook as live resources, with episodes on a regular
basis. This is an accessible, lively, active text that prepares
students to outbound disciplinary knowledge. This unique and
engaging textbook will be core reading for undergraduate
anthropology students, as well as a source of teaching inspiration
for lecturers of undergraduate anthropology units. It would also be
a useful text for undergraduate students conducting ethnographic
research.
The Handbook of Latent Semantic Analysis is the authoritative
reference for the theory behind Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA), a
burgeoning mathematical method used to analyze how words make
meaning, with the desired outcome to program machines to understand
human commands via natural language rather than strict programming
protocols. The first book of its kind to deliver such a
comprehensive analysis, this volume explores every area of the
method and combines theoretical implications as well as practical
matters of LSA. Readers are introduced to a powerful new way of
understanding language phenomena, as well as innovative ways to
perform tasks that depend on language or other complex systems. The
Handbook clarifies misunderstandings and pre-formed objections to
LSA, and provides examples of exciting new educational technologies
made possible by LSA and similar techniques. It raises issues in
philosophy, artificial intelligence, and linguistics, while
describing how LSA has underwritten a range of educational
technologies and information systems. Alternate approaches to
language understanding are addressed and compared to LSA. This work
is essential reading for anyone-newcomers to this area and experts
alike-interested in how human language works or interested in
computational analysis and uses of text. Educational technologists,
cognitive scientists, philosophers, and information technologists
in particular will consider this volume especially useful.
This textbook is written by well-established anthropology
professors for, and with, their undergraduate students. It explores
what anthropological thinking is, what anthropological approaches
are, and how these are applied in real-world settings. It provides
a thorough introduction to key methods, theories and the
disciplinary value of contemporary anthropology. This book
deliberately steps beyond the standard textbook format.
Undergraduate students reveal the processes by which they came to
understand and apply anthropological knowledge using everyday
experiences and common life events as examples, while also
showcasing the research that student authors produced as a result
of understanding and operationalising those processes. This fresh
take showcases what can be done with anthropological knowledge, not
what you can do with anthropology when you've achieved the rank of
professor. This book is accompanied by practical exercises, and
podcasts that relate to each of the chapters. Podcasts extend
beyond the textbook as live resources, with episodes on a regular
basis. This is an accessible, lively, active text that prepares
students to outbound disciplinary knowledge. This unique and
engaging textbook will be core reading for undergraduate
anthropology students, as well as a source of teaching inspiration
for lecturers of undergraduate anthropology units. It would also be
a useful text for undergraduate students conducting ethnographic
research.
Social enterprise has become a much discussed term in recent years,
often in conjunction with the public sector - the idea that
entrepreneurship might somehow step in and save the public purse
has taken hold in a number of areas. This book introduces and
explains the terminology surrounding social enterprise and brings
much-needed rigour to proceedings by demonstrating how this can be
measured, evaluated and held accountable. A range of validated
evaluation measures, tools and techniques, such as 'SROI', the
'Outcomes Star' and randomised control trials, are presented in
individual research projects, conducted by an exciting and eclectic
mix of international authors who are recognised experts in the
field of social enterprise. Wrapping up with the ground-breaking
use of a General Self-Efficacy scale, a reflective critique of
social finance and a challenge to the actual concept of social
enterprise, the book discusses the potential disadvantages that can
arise from the commodification of social enterprise activities,
resulting in a fascinating summary of current thinking surrounding
this topic.
Social enterprise has become a much discussed term in recent years,
often in conjunction with the public sector - the idea that
entrepreneurship might somehow step in and save the public purse
has taken hold in a number of areas. This book introduces and
explains the terminology surrounding social enterprise and brings
much-needed rigour to proceedings by demonstrating how this can be
measured, evaluated and held accountable. A range of validated
evaluation measures, tools and techniques, such as 'SROI', the
'Outcomes Star' and randomised control trials, are presented in
individual research projects, conducted by an exciting and eclectic
mix of international authors who are recognised experts in the
field of social enterprise. Wrapping up with the ground-breaking
use of a General Self-Efficacy scale, a reflective critique of
social finance and a challenge to the actual concept of social
enterprise, the book discusses the potential disadvantages that can
arise from the commodification of social enterprise activities,
resulting in a fascinating summary of current thinking surrounding
this topic.
The" Handbook of Latent Semantic Analysis "is the authoritative
reference for the theory behind Latent Semantic Analysis (LSA), a
burgeoning mathematical method used to analyze how words make
meaning, with the desired outcome to program machines to understand
human commands via natural language rather than strict programming
protocols. The first book of its kind to deliver such a
comprehensive analysis, this volume explores every area of the
method and combines theoretical implications as well as practical
matters of LSA.
Readers will be introduced to a powerful new way of understanding
language phenomena, as well as innovative ways to perform tasks
that depend on language or other complex systems. The "Handbook
"clarifies misunderstandings and pre-formed objections to LSA, and
provides examples of exciting new educational technologies made
possible by LSA and similar techniques. It raises issues in
philosophy, artificial intelligence, and linguistics, while
describing how LSA has underwritten a range of educational
technologies and information systems. Alternate approaches to
language understanding are addressed and compared to LSA.
This work" "is essential reading for anyone-- newcomers to this
area and experts alike-- interested in how human language works or
interested in computational analysis and uses of text. Educational
technologists, cognitive scientists, philosophers, and information
technologists in particular will consider this volume especially
useful.
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Permanent Collection Issue 1 (Paperback)
Sarah Stephenson; Text written by Anthony Huberman, Laura Hoptman, Sarah Rifky, Rodney Graham; Contributions by …
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R391
Discovery Miles 3 910
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Simon Denny - Full Participation (Paperback)
Simon Denny; Foreword by Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson; Text written by Jacob Proctor, Pablo Larios, Hanna Hölling
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R918
R797
Discovery Miles 7 970
Save R121 (13%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Employing a hybrid approach located somewhere between research
project, retail display, and promotional campaign, Simon Denny's
diverse artistic practice reflects on the production, distribution,
and consumption of media in an age of accelerated technological
obsolescence and relentless cultural overproduction. Through a
variety of media, including photographs, sculpture, video, and
printed ephemera, Denny invites us to consider the evolution of
television and video as both technologies and cultural forms.
Although tobacco is a legal substance, many governments around the
world have introduced legislation to restrict smoking and access to
tobacco products. Smokefree critically examines these changes, from
the increasing numbers of places being designated as 'smokefree' to
changes in cigarette packaging and the portrayal of smoking in
popular culture. Unlike existing texts, this book neither advances
a public health agenda nor condemns the erosion of individual
rights. Instead, Simone Dennis takes a classical anthropological
approach to present the first agenda-free, full-length study of
smoking. Observing and analysing smoking practices and
environments, she investigates how the social, moral, political and
legal atmosphere of 'smokefree' came into being and examines the
ideas about smoke, air, the senses, space, and time which underlie
it. Looking at the impact on public space and individuals, she
reveals broader findings about the relationship between the state,
agents, and what is seen to constitute 'the public'. Enriched with
ethnographic vignettes from the author's ten years of fieldwork in
Australia, Smokefree is a challenging, important book which demands
to be read and discussed by anyone with an interest in
anthropology, sociology, political science, human geography, and
public health.
Although tobacco is a legal substance, many governments around the
world have introduced legislation to restrict smoking and access to
tobacco products. Smokefree critically examines these changes, from
the increasing numbers of places being designated as 'smokefree' to
changes in cigarette packaging and the portrayal of smoking in
popular culture. Unlike existing texts, this book neither advances
a public health agenda nor condemns the erosion of individual
rights. Instead, Simone Dennis takes a classical anthropological
approach to present the first agenda-free, full-length study of
smoking. Observing and analysing smoking practices and
environments, she investigates how the social, moral, political and
legal atmosphere of 'smokefree' came into being and examines the
ideas about smoke, air, the senses, space, and time which underlie
it. Looking at the impact on public space and individuals, she
reveals broader findings about the relationship between the state,
agents, and what is seen to constitute 'the public'. Enriched with
ethnographic vignettes from the author's ten years of fieldwork in
Australia, Smokefree is a challenging, important book which demands
to be read and discussed by anyone with an interest in
anthropology, sociology, political science, human geography, and
public health.
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