Redistribution Dilemmas and Ethical Commitments: Advisers in Austerity Britain's Local Welfare State
In: Ethnos: journal of anthropology, Band 87, Heft 1, S. 42-58
ISSN: 1469-588X
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In: Ethnos: journal of anthropology, Band 87, Heft 1, S. 42-58
ISSN: 1469-588X
In: The journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, Band 21, Heft S1, S. 113-128
ISSN: 1467-9655
Whilst anthropological discussions of morality tend to be rooted in Aristotelian ethical theory, this paper highlights an alternative Christian moral reasoning rooted in Neoplatonist/Christian hybrids and visible in contemporary Eastern Orthodox monastic practice. The analytical move proposed here is to focus on the disjunctures between different ethical traditions within Christianity in order to show how they produce diverse forms of moral reasoning that rely on particular uses of exemplarity and exemplification. It is argued that the Aristotelian lens, with its stress on compliance, piety, obedience, and the daily practice of self‐perfection, can produce impoverished accounts of ascetic life by excluding the more anarchic and idiosyncratic forms of spiritual training. Christianity has a long tradition of deploying paradox and perplexity to explode facile certainties, thereby carving out a space, at the limits of human knowing, where a divinity conceived as radically alter to the created world can be directly engaged with.
In: American anthropologist: AA, Band 111, Heft 1, S. 103-104
ISSN: 1548-1433
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 413-414
ISSN: 1477-9021
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 31, Heft 2, S. 413-415
ISSN: 0305-8298
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 187-189
ISSN: 0305-8298
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 187-189
ISSN: 1477-9021
In: Millennium: journal of international studies, Band 28, Heft 3, S. 799-800
ISSN: 1477-9021
In: Oñati Socio-Legal Series, Band 7, Heft 7
SSRN
In: Social analysis: journal of cultural and social practice, Band 58, Heft 3
ISSN: 1558-5727
In: Studies in Social Analysis 4
Stategraphy—the ethnographic exploration of relational modes, boundary work, and forms of embeddedness of actors—offers crucial analytical avenues for researching the state. By exploring interactions and negotiations of local actors in different institutional settings, the contributors explore state transformations in relation to social security in a variety of locations spanning from Russia, Eastern Europe, and the Balkans to the United Kingdom and France. Fusing grounded empirical studies with rigorous theorizing, the volume provides new perspectives to broader related debates in social research and political analysis