ABSTRACT
The anthropology of Britain is hotly debated. What does it mean to live in Britain and to be 'British', and is an anthropology of Britain even a legitimate undertaking? British Subjects presents a forthright voice in this debate. Key anthropological concerns such as community, rationality, aesthetics, the body, power, work and leisure, nationalism and transnationalism are found reflected in the lives of a wide range of British 'subjects'--from farmers to dancers, children to retired miners, new-agers to entrepreneurs. In disputing traditional claims that anthropology 'at home' and 'of one's own' is misconceived, unnecessary or unperceptive, this book clearly establishes that an anthropology of Britain can set excellent standards of subtle ethnography and complex analysis. Providing a nuanced appreciation of the intricacies of British society, this book shows how the anthropological study of Britain can offer an enlightening paradigm for the study of individual lives.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|23 pages
Introduction
part II|59 pages
Nationalism, Contestation and the Performance of Tradition
part II|54 pages
Strategies of Modernity: Heritage, Leisure, Dissociation
part IV|64 pages
The Appropriation of Discourse
part V|54 pages
Methodologies and Ethnomethodologies
part VI|63 pages
The Making (and Unmaking) of Community: Ethnicity, Religiosity, Locality
part VII|9 pages
Epilogue