Description
Book SynopsisThe notion of sociality is now widely used within the social sciences and humanities. However, what is meant by the term varies radically, and the contributors here, through compelling and wide ranging essays, identify the strengths and weaknesses of current definitions and their deployment in the social sciences.
Trade Review “This book reclaims sociality as a research domain for socio-cultural anthropology, as it clearly emphasises the processual and biosocial character of sociality instead of looking at it as a product of social relations or as a biological capacity. The ethnographic case studies provide fine examples of the ever-changing forms in which humans relate to each other, to animals and to the environment, and of how they infuse objects and actions with meaning, as well as anticipate the future and imagine possible worlds.” · Social Anthropology/Anthropologie Sociale
"An ambitious book that aims to put both the concept and changing empirical status of sociality at the center of the agenda of anthropology and the social sciences more broadly… The contributions are all at a high level." · Webb Keane, University of Michigan
Table of Contents List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction: Sociality’s New Directions
Nicholas J. Long & Henrietta L. Moore
Chapter 2. Avatars and Robots: The Imaginary Present and the Socialities of the Inorganic
Henrietta L. Moore
Chapter 3. Imagining the World that Warrants Our Imagination: The Revelation of Ontogeny
Christina Toren
Chapter 4. Sociality and Its Dangers: Witchcraft, Intimacy and Trust
Peter Geschiere
Chapter 5. Group Belonging in Trade Unions: Idioms of Sociality in Bolivia and Argentina
Sian Lazar
Chpater 6. A Sociality of, and Beyond, ‘My-home’ in Post-corporate Japan
Anne Allison
Chapter 7. Actants Amassing (AA)
Adam Yuet Chau
Chapter 8. Doing, Being and Becoming: The Sociality of Children with Autism in Activities with Therapy Dogs and Other People
Olga Solomon
Chapter 9. Materials and Sociality
Susanne Küchler
Chapter 10. The Art of Slow Sociality: Movement, Aesthetics and Shared Understanding
Jo Vergunst and Anna Vermehren
Notes on Contributors
Index