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This book offers a novel interpretation of contemporary modernity and its permanent liminality by revisiting the classical question of the nature of evil through the anthropologically based concept of the 'trickster': a paradoxical figure who is considered at once an outcast and a cultural hero.
This book offers a novel interpretation of contemporary modernity and its permanent liminality by revisiting the classical question of the nature of evil through the anthropologically based concept of the 'trickster': a paradoxical figure who is considered at once an outcast and a cultural hero.
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Autorenporträt
Agnes Horvath is a founding and chief editor of International Political Anthropology. She taught in Hungary, Ireland and Italy, and was affiliate visiting scholar and supervisor at Cambridge University. She is the author of Modernism and Charisma, the co-author of The Dissolution of Communist Power: The Case of Hungary and Walking into the Void: A Historical Sociology and Political Anthropology of Walking, and the co-editor of Breaking Boundaries: Varieties of Liminality, Walling, Boundaries and Liminality and Divinization and Technology: The Political Anthropology of the Subversive.
Arpad Szakolczai is professor of sociology at University College Cork, Ireland and previously taught social theory at the European University Institute in Florence. He is the author of Max Weber and Michel Foucault: Parallel Life-Works, Reflexive Historical Sociology, Sociology, Religion and Grace: A Quest for the Renaissance, The Genesis of Modernity, Comedy and the Public Sphere, Novels and the Sociology of the Contemporary, and Permanent Liminality and Modernity, and the co-author of Walking into the Void: A Historical Sociology and Political Anthropology of Walking and From Anthropology to Social Theory: Rethinking the Social Sciences.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Part 1: Presenting the Trickster 1. The Trickster in Anthropology: The Figure as seen from the Outside 2. Techniques of Trickster Entrapment: The Nets of Spiders and Magicians 3. Hermes the Trickster and the Kabeiroi: Moving Towards Evil 4. Plato's Theaetetus: The Sophists and Secret Trickster Knowledge 5. Vedic Tricksterology: Tricking the Body into Self-Destruction Part 2: Tracking Trickster Traces: Evil Machinations 6. Prehistoric Trickster: Archaic Outlines of Evil 7. The Troglodytes: Evil Protoscientific Methods for Transformation 8. Monsters: Creatures of the Flux 9. Evil Alchemy: The Incommensurable Concluding Comments: On Methodology in Tricksterology
Introduction Part 1: Presenting the Trickster 1. The Trickster in Anthropology: The Figure as seen from the Outside 2. Techniques of Trickster Entrapment: The Nets of Spiders and Magicians 3. Hermes the Trickster and the Kabeiroi: Moving Towards Evil 4. Plato's Theaetetus: The Sophists and Secret Trickster Knowledge 5. Vedic Tricksterology: Tricking the Body into Self-Destruction Part 2: Tracking Trickster Traces: Evil Machinations 6. Prehistoric Trickster: Archaic Outlines of Evil 7. The Troglodytes: Evil Protoscientific Methods for Transformation 8. Monsters: Creatures of the Flux 9. Evil Alchemy: The Incommensurable Concluding Comments: On Methodology in Tricksterology
Introduction Part 1: Presenting the Trickster 1. The Trickster in Anthropology: The Figure as seen from the Outside 2. Techniques of Trickster Entrapment: The Nets of Spiders and Magicians 3. Hermes the Trickster and the Kabeiroi: Moving Towards Evil 4. Plato's Theaetetus: The Sophists and Secret Trickster Knowledge 5. Vedic Tricksterology: Tricking the Body into Self-Destruction Part 2: Tracking Trickster Traces: Evil Machinations 6. Prehistoric Trickster: Archaic Outlines of Evil 7. The Troglodytes: Evil Protoscientific Methods for Transformation 8. Monsters: Creatures of the Flux 9. Evil Alchemy: The Incommensurable Concluding Comments: On Methodology in Tricksterology
Introduction Part 1: Presenting the Trickster 1. The Trickster in Anthropology: The Figure as seen from the Outside 2. Techniques of Trickster Entrapment: The Nets of Spiders and Magicians 3. Hermes the Trickster and the Kabeiroi: Moving Towards Evil 4. Plato's Theaetetus: The Sophists and Secret Trickster Knowledge 5. Vedic Tricksterology: Tricking the Body into Self-Destruction Part 2: Tracking Trickster Traces: Evil Machinations 6. Prehistoric Trickster: Archaic Outlines of Evil 7. The Troglodytes: Evil Protoscientific Methods for Transformation 8. Monsters: Creatures of the Flux 9. Evil Alchemy: The Incommensurable Concluding Comments: On Methodology in Tricksterology
Rezensionen
"Because evil is a term fraught with religious overtones, it tends to be undertheorized in our largely secular contemporary culture. Yet something like evil continues to exist, arguably more forcefully today than ever, so the authors of this timely and important book assert. They argue boldly that understanding the continued presence of evil in the modern world requires reconceiving evil through the mythical figure of the trickster, a cross-cultural symbol that represents the perennial temptation to ignore the inherent limits of human thought and action. A wide ranging study that draws on multiple disciplinary sources, Horvath and Szakolczai illustrate forcefully how contemporary efforts to maximize productivity across all sectors of our social order violates the ethos of limits, and only liberates further the forces of destruction. In an age of increasingly mindless (and therefore runaway) processes, we would do well to heed the message of this significant study."- Gilbert Germain, Professor of Political Thought at the University of Prince Edward Island, Canada
"A complex and timely meditation on the nature of evil in human societies, reaching back into the distant past - while not all will agree with its methods or conclusions, this book offers provocative ideas for consideration by anthropologists, philosophers, and culture historians." - David Wengrow, Professor of Comparative Archaeology, University College London, UK
"This book offers an original and thought-provoking engagement with a problem for which we still lack adequate perspectives: the disastrous experience of advanced modernity with what we can provisionally call demonic power." - Johann Arnason, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, La Trobe University, Australia
"Horvath and Szakolczai provide a remarkable service in bringing the neglected figure of the trickster into the spotlight. This is a book to be recommended and savoured as a fillip to the sociological imagination today."- Chris Rojek, Professor of Sociology, City University of London, UK