|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Rodanthi Tzanelli (University of Leeds, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.390kg ISBN: 9781032173672ISBN 10: 103217367 Pages: 276 Publication Date: 30 September 2021 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe book is an imaginative contribution to the sociology of aesthetics and offers interesting perspectives on mobility and belonging. Gerard Delanty, Professor of Sociology, Social and Political Thought, Sussex European Institute & School of Law, Politics and Sociology. Rodanthi's multi-layered monograph offers intricate social-scientific analyses of the key human processes of becoming and belonging. Through four rhizomatic 'readings' that draw on various instantiations of the magical-realist type of 'the explorer', the author shares her critical insights about the current condition of Greece in particular and post-colonialisation and neo-liberalisation in general. That this thought-provoking text is hard to summarize or categorize is perhaps all the more reason to read it. Noel B. Salazar, Sociocultural Anthropologist, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. This remarkable and incredibly wide-ranging book is on one level a study of a tourist event, the 'one breath' Underwater Gallery off the Greek island Amorgos, but it is also about so much more. Through uncovering the many modalities and layers of the tourist site, Tzanelli encompasses, one might say, a breathtakingly original and challenging interrogation of cultural theory, modernist aesthetics, tourist studies, sociology, visual theory, feminism, and postcolonial theory. Through a magical realist, contrasted with rationalist, lens her book is also informed by an emancipatory imperative to elucidate alternative visions of modernity through exploration of existential, experiential and corporeal travel. It is a landmark work of empirical sociological study and critical social theory. Larry Ray, Professor of Sociology, University of Kent. Social thinking is a creative endeavor. Unfortunately, there is often quite far between real manifestations of critical-creative social thinking. Rodanthi Tzanelli's book on Magical Realist Sociologies of Belonging and Becoming comes to a well-awaited rescue for those stranded on the shores of routinized thinking. Rarely do we find such creativity in the field as in this book. The exploration reaches deep into the waters of interdisciplinary reflection, and travels across the vast territories of art, philosophy, and social theory making an important lighthouse for contemporary social thinking. We needed a magical realist map of this world, and Dr. Tzanelli just provided us with one. Ole B. Jensen, Professor of Urban Theory, Department of Architecture, Design & Media Technology, Aalborg University. This is the first book to boldly and magically transform traditional notions of worldmaking, being and becoming, critically challenging industrial capitalism and rationalized modernity to create radical conceptualizations of ethnic, gendered and non-human difference. Guided by Greek magic realism and postcolonial modes of 'realist magic', Dr. Tzanelli undertakes a philosophical and cultural journey into the multidimensional phenomenon of popular culture, transcending disciplinary silos, decentering the sociological imagination from Western-centered perspectives, and interleaving magically with tourism to construct new ontological and epistemological understandings and analyses of cultural pragmatics. Interview quotes and a personalized narrative weave artistry into phenomenal and material exploration of digital and cinematic technologies, govermobility , emotion, embodiment and performativities of belonging. Tazim Jamal, Professor, Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences, University of Texas. In this work of iconoclastic erudition, which drives a critical wedge into the authority of rationalist social-science epistemologies, Rodanthi Tzanelli probes the persistence of hierarchies of art, scholarship, and cultural identity in the neoliberal age. By performing this exercise in a particular country, Greece, and by sympathetically connecting that country's cultural specificities to its ongoing geopolitical vicissitudes, she reveals the dynamics and constraints of local artistic production as symptomatic of global realities - and especially of the capacity of powerful interests to disenchant the world by denying or fixing the significance of embodied experience. Michael Herzfeld, Ernest E. Monrad Research Professor of the Social Sciences, Harvard University. Tzanelli's unique book takes us on a journey of embodied artistic subjectivity as it navigates modernity's multiplicity, and especially the price that must be paid for protecting what one loves in the (post)colonial, hypermobile Capitalocene. Those with a deep knowledge of sociological theory will particularly appreciate Tzanelli's layered and complex treatment of the issues she considers, while more general tourism studies readers will enjoy tracing the book's central character and his freediving community's artistic engagement through tourism's governmental-industrial worldmaking machine. Kellee Caton, Professor of Tourism, Thompson Rivers University. The book is an imaginative contribution to the sociology of aesthetics and offers interesting perspectives on mobility and belonging. Gerard Delanty, Professor of Sociology, Social and Political Thought, Sussex European Institute & School of Law, Politics and Sociology. Rodanthi's multi-layered monograph offers intricate social-scientific analyses of the key human processes of becoming and belonging. Through four rhizomatic 'readings' that draw on various instantiations of the magical-realist type of 'the explorer', the author shares her critical insights about the current condition of Greece in particular and post-colonialisation and neo-liberalisation in general. That this thought-provoking text is hard to summarize or categorize is perhaps all the more reason to read it. Noel B. Salazar, Sociocultural Anthropologist, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. This remarkable and incredibly wide-ranging book is on one level a study of a tourist event, the 'one breath' Underwater Gallery off the Greek island Amorgos, but it is also about so much more. Through uncovering the many modalities and layers of the tourist site, Tzanelli encompasses, one might say, a breathtakingly original and challenging interrogation of cultural theory, modernist aesthetics, tourist studies, sociology, visual theory, feminism, and postcolonial theory. Through a magical realist, contrasted with rationalist, lens her book is also informed by an emancipatory imperative to elucidate alternative visions of modernity through exploration of existential, experiential and corporeal travel. It is a landmark work of empirical sociological study and critical social theory. Larry Ray, Professor of Sociology, University of Kent. Social thinking is a creative endeavor. Unfortunately, there is often quite far between real manifestations of critical-creative social thinking. Rodanthi Tzanelli's book on Magical Realist Sociologies of Belonging and Becoming comes to a well-awaited rescue for those stranded on the shores of routinized thinking. Rarely do we find such creativity in the field as in this book. The exploration reaches deep into the waters of interdisciplinary reflection, and travels across the vast territories of art, philosophy, and social theory making an important lighthouse for contemporary social thinking. We needed a magical realist map of this world, and Dr. Tzanelli just provided us with one. Ole B. Jensen, Professor of Urban Theory, Department of Architecture, Design & Media Technology, Aalborg University. This is the first book to boldly and magically transform traditional notions of worldmaking, being and becoming, critically challenging industrial capitalism and rationalized modernity to create radical conceptualizations of ethnic, gendered and non-human difference. Guided by Greek magic realism and postcolonial modes of 'realist magic', Dr. Tzanelli undertakes a philosophical and cultural journey into the multidimensional phenomenon of popular culture, transcending disciplinary silos, decentering the sociological imagination from Western-centered perspectives, and interleaving magically with tourism to construct new ontological and epistemological understandings and analyses of cultural pragmatics. Interview quotes and a personalized narrative weave artistry into phenomenal and material exploration of digital and cinematic technologies, govermobility , emotion, embodiment and performativities of belonging. Tazim Jamal, Professor, Department of Recreation, Park and Tourism Sciences, University of Texas. In this work of iconoclastic erudition, which drives a critical wedge into the authority of rationalist social-science epistemologies, Rodanthi Tzanelli probes the persistence of hierarchies of art, scholarship, and cultural identity in the neoliberal age. By performing this exercise in a particular country, Greece, and by sympathetically connecting that country's cultural specificities to its ongoing geopolitical vicissitudes, she reveals the dynamics and constraints of local artistic production as symptomatic of global realities - and especially of the capacity of powerful interests to disenchant the world by denying or fixing the significance of embodied experience. Michael Herzfeld, Ernest E. Monrad Research Professor of the Social Sciences, Harvard University. Tzanelli's unique book takes us on a journey of embodied artistic subjectivity as it navigates modernity's multiplicity, and especially the price that must be paid for protecting what one loves in the (post)colonial, hypermobile Capitalocene. Those with a deep knowledge of sociological theory will particularly appreciate Tzanelli's layered and complex treatment of the issues she considers, while more general tourism studies readers will enjoy tracing the book's central character and his freediving community's artistic engagement through tourism's governmental-industrial worldmaking machine. Kellee Caton, Professor of Tourism, Thompson Rivers University. There can be no question of the originality of Tzanelli's insights on the condition of contemporary Greece as an example of post-colonialisation and neo-liberalisation which is of relevance to other societies, and on the limits of Western rationalism and modernity in addressing so many contemporary global divisions and problems. The focus on magical realism brings something entirely new to established notions of worldmaking, while countering Western-dominated conceptions of the nature and boundaries of the discipline of Sociology. The book is highly original also in its sociological take on MR, adding a fresh dimension to conventional accounts of this artistic and literary mode, and to existing debates on its meaning and implications. Peter Vincent-Jones, Magical Realism Brighton. Magical realist sociologies of belonging and becoming brings a clear and fresh position to the foreground, scrutinizing on the other side of imperialism as well as the impacts of digital technologies in the daily lifestyle. The darkness says much of the mainstream cultural values of society than we certainly imagine. For those readers concerned by politics and mobilities, this book offers a high-quality and elegantlywritten text which articulates magisterially different academic position, viewpoints and theories into an allencompassing diagnosis. Maximiliano E. Korstanje, University of Palermo, Argentina. Appeared in Journal of Tourism, Heritage & Services Marketing, Vol.6. Author InformationRodanthi Tzanelli is Associate Professor of Cultural Sociology at the University of Leeds, UK. She is author of numerous research papers and chapters, as well as 11 monographs. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |