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Power and the Self Jeannette Marie Mageo (Washington State University)

Power and the Self By Jeannette Marie Mageo (Washington State University)

Summary

In this book, first published in 2002, scholars in contemporary psychological anthropology who have contributed to critical social theory and social construction of selfhood and identity examine the relations between political structures and economic circumstances on the one hand, and motivations, emotions and meanings on the other.

Power and the Self Summary

Power and the Self by Jeannette Marie Mageo (Washington State University)

Power and the Self, first published in 2002, deals with an important but neglected topic: the ways in which power is experienced by individuals, both as agents and as objects of the exercise of power. Each contributor presents a series of case studies drawn from a variety of cultural contexts, including the analysis of the appeal of Japanese superhero toys for American children; the conditions that lead to dehumanising treatment of patients in an American nursing home; the experiences of a Turkish immigrant woman in the Netherlands; a contribution relating theories about the capacity to commit genocidal violence to 'everyday forms of violence', and other cases from New Guinea and Samoa. The introduction provides a readable historical review and synthesis of the theoretical ideas that provide the context for the work presented in the book.

Power and the Self Reviews

'This sparkling collection of essays addresses the ways in which subjects experience power, both as agents of social process, and as the objects of such processes ... As a collection these papers are remarkably well synthesized, presented a variety of approaches ... many of the papers speak to one another, and actually illuminate complimentary perspectives ... I found each of these papers interesting and rewarding ...'. Cambridge Anthropology
'... lucid and engaging, theoretically informed, and grounded in either ethnographic research or personal experiences ... constitutes yet another useful contribution to anthropological understanding from members of the psychological anthropology clan.' The Journal of The Royal Anthropological Institute

About Jeannette Marie Mageo (Washington State University)

Jeannette Marie Mageo is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Washington State University. She has lived and done extensive fieldwork in the Pacific, and she writes about self, power, transvesticism, spirit possession, moral discourse and body symbolism.

Table of Contents

Foreword Gananath Obeyesekere; 1. Introduction: Theorizing power and the self Jeannette Mageo and Bruce Knauft; Part I. Power Differentials in the US: 2. The genocidal continuum: peace time crimes Nancy Scheper-Hughes; 3. Intimate power, public selves: Bakhtin's space of authoring William S. Lachicotte; Part II. Transitional Psychologies: 4. Playing with power: morphing toys and transforming heroes in kids' mass culture Ann Allison; 5. Consciousness of the state and the experience of self: the runaway daughter of a Turkish guest worker Katherine Ewing; Part III. Colonial Encounters: Power/History/Self: 6. Spirit, self, and power: the making of colonial experience in Papua New Guinea Douglas Dalton; 7. Self models and sexual agency Jeannette Mageo; Part IV. Reading Power against the Grain: 8. Eager subjects, reluctant powers: the irrelevance of ideology in a secret New Guinea male cult Harriet Whitehead; 9. Feminist emotions Catherine Lutz.

Additional information

NLS9780521004602
9780521004602
0521004608
Power and the Self by Jeannette Marie Mageo (Washington State University)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2002-01-24
234
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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