Anna Grimshaw:The Ethnographer's Eye: Ways of Seeing in Anthropology
- Livro de bolso 2010, ISBN: 9780521773102
Edição encadernada
1997. London ; New York, Routledge, 1997. Octavo. x, 260 pages. Softcover. Excellent condition with some minor signs of wear only. Includes: Genealogy of the Republic / Rethinking Irelan… mais…
1997. London ; New York, Routledge, 1997. Octavo. x, 260 pages. Softcover. Excellent condition with some minor signs of wear only. Includes: Genealogy of the Republic / Rethinking Ireland - A proposal for a joint sovereignity solution / Northern Ireland's Future as a European Region / Towards a Council of Islands of Britain and Ireland / The Fifth Province: Between the Local and the Global / Myths of Motherland / Myth and Nation in Modern Irish Poetry / George Berkeley - We Irish think otherwise / John Toland - An Irish Philosopher ? / John Tyndall and Irish Science etc. etc., 1997, 0, 2010. Dublin ; Portland, OR, Four Courts, c2010. 24 cm. 400 pages with 16 pages of plates. Original Hardcover with original dustjacket. Excellent condition with only minor signs of external wear. 1972 proved to be by far the bloodiest and most eventful year of the Northern Ireland conflict. The January shootings in Derry precipitated the downfall of the Stormont administration in March. British military reinforcements struggled to cope with the ferocity of the IRA's escalating campaign, the worst manifestations of which were no warning attacks such as those in Claudy and Belfast on Bloody Friday. Yet 1972, regarded by republicans as their 'Year of Victory, ' arguably marked both the high point of their campaign and the beginning of its demise. Loyalist paramilitarism was rampant during the year, as both the UVF and UDA were responsible for an increasing number of sectarian attacks and stand-offs with the British Army. 1972 also witnessed a further hemorrhaging of unionism, the emergence of the potentially sinister Vanguard movement, and the substitution of Westminster grandees for locally-elected politicians when it came to the governance of the region. This book tells the story of the most extraordinary year of the modern Northern conflict (Publisher), 2010, 0, 2005. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. 23 cm. xiv, 287 pages. Original Hardcover with original dustjacket. Excellent condition with only minor signs of external wear. How has Parliament changed since 1964 and how must it further evolve to meet the challenges of a new century in the light of devolution, a growing European Union and a post-modern culture? This collection of authoritative and lively essays to mark the fortieth anniversary of the Study of Parliament Group covers topics such as scrutinising the Government, making laws, guarding the citizenry, the new media and adapting to the world beyond Westminster., 2005, 0, 1989. New York / Melbourne, Cambridge University Press, 1989. 15 cm x 22.5 cm. XVIII, 754 pages. Original softcover. Very condition with only very minor signs of external wear. Including a newspaper-clipping with a lengthy review of the book. Name of preowner on endpaper. Includes the following contents: Rebellion: 1912-1922 - The Easter Rising - Sinn Féin / Consolitation:1922-1932 - Northern Ireland - Fianna Fáil / Experiment: 1932-1945 / Malaise: 1945-1958 / Expansion: 1958-1969 / North: 1945-1985 / Drift: 1969-? / Perspectives. "Ireland, 1912–1985 is the first study on this scale of Irish performance, North and South, in the twentieth century. Although stressing the primacy of politics in Irish public affairs, it argues that Irish politics must be understood in the broad context of economic, social, administrative, cultural and intellectual history. The book also explores fully the relationship between rhetoric and reality in the Irish mind, and sees political behaviour largely as a product of collective psychology. The 'Irish experience' is placed firmly in a comparative context. Therefore the book seeks to assess the relative importance of British influence and of indigenous impulses in shaping an independent Ireland, and to identify the relationship between personality and process in determining Irish history. Particularly close attention is paid to the role of individuals such as Eamon de Valera, Michael Collins, W. T. Cosgrove, Sir James Craig, J. J. McElligott, Sean Lemass, Terence O'Neill, and Ian Paisley, and to the limits within which even the most powerful personalities were forced to operate. This is by any standards a massive analytical study, of the first importance, which will become required reading by all who wish to deepen their understanding of the nature of modern Irish history and the way it has been shaped by the collective and individual personality." (Amazon)., 1989, 0, 1992. Dublin, Gill and Macmillan, 1992. Octavo. xviii, (5) 373 pages. With maps and illustrations. Original Softcover. Excellent condition with only minor signs of external wear. Including an interesting newspaper-clipping with a review of this book. Includes for Example: Roots and Rebellion (1913-1916)/ The War of Independence (1917-21)/ The Civil War (1922-3)/ The Army Legalised (1922-24)/ Fluctuations and Adjustments (1923-39)/ The Emergency (1939-45)/ Post-War Periods (1946-69)/ United Nations (from 1960)/ Aid and Assistance (from 1969) etc. Illustrations include: Eamon de Valera, 1916/ A group of Irish Volunteers, 1914015/ Collins and Griffith/ Tom Barry/ Parade at Collins Barracks, 1923/ Fritz Brase and Richard Mulcahy, 1923/ Eoin O'Duffy and Michael Brennan/ Kohl, von Hunefeld and Fitzmaurice/ Matt Feehan and Vivion de Valera/ Col. Tom McNally, Lt. Gen. Hugo MacNeill/ An 18-pounder gun team, May 1930/ A 25-pounder battery, 1940s/ Oscar Traynor and the Army High Command, 1943/ Naas District Command, LSF, during the Emergency/ Col. Dan Bryan/ John A. Costello with guard of honour/ Sean MacEoin inspects FCA guard of honour, 1951/ Preparing to go the the Congo, 1960/ Funerals of the Niemba Ambush, 1961/ A patrol in Cyprus/ Guarding a crossing point in Lebanon/ Crossing the Suez Canal, 1973/ Corvettes of the Naval Service/ Simulated air-rescue/ Preparedfor all eventualities/ Air Corps helicopters over Baldonnel/ Air Corps Fouga Magisters/ Lt. Gen. William Callaghan etc. The origins of the Irish Army lie with the foundation of the Irish Volunteers in 1913. The Volunteers were taken over by John Redmond but split in 1914 over Redmond's request that they fight for Britain in the Great War. A minority who dissented from that view retained the title Irish Volunteers and instead embarked upon activities which culminated in the Easter Rising of 1916. This is the first history of the national army and, as such, is an important contribution to the history of modern Ireland., 1992, 0, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2002 Grimshaws exploration of the role of vision within modern anthropology engages with current debates about ocularcentism, investigating the relationship between vision and knowledge in ethnographic enquiry. Using John Bergers notion of ways of seeing? the author argues that vision operates differently as a technique and theory of knowledge within the discipline. In the first part of the book she examines contrasting visions at work in the so-called classical British school, reassessing the legacy of Rivers, Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown through the lens of early modern art and cinema. In the second part of the book, the changing relationship between vision and knowledge is explored through the anthropology of Jean Rouch, David and Judith MacDougall, and Melissa Llewelyn-Davies. Vision is foregrounded in the work of these contemporary ethnographers, focusing more general questions about technique and epistemology whether image-based media are used or not in ethnographic enquiry. Contents Part I. Visualizing Anthropology: The Modernist Moment and After, 1895?945: 1. Anxious visions: rivers, cubism and anthropological modernism; 2. The innocent eye: Flaherty, Malinowski and the romantic quest; 3. The light of reason: Grierson, Radcliffe-Brown and the Enlightenment project; Part II. Anthropological Visions: Cinema and Anthropology in the Postwar World: 4. The anthropological cinema of Jean Rouch; 5. The anthropological cinema of David and Judith MacDougall; 6. The anthropological television of Melissa Llewelyn-Davies. Printed Pages: 236.. Reprint. Hard Cover. Brand New. 16 Cms x 24 Cms., Cambridge University Press, 2002, 6<