توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Electrifying Anthropology: Exploring Electrical Practices and Infrastructures
نام کتاب : Electrifying Anthropology: Exploring Electrical Practices and Infrastructures
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : انسانشناسی برقدار: کاوش در تمرینها و زیرساختهای الکتریکی
سری :
نویسندگان : Simone Abram, Brit Ross Winthereik, Thomas Yarrow
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 225
ISBN (شابک) : 9781350102644 , 9781350102668
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 11 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Title Page\nCopyright Page\nContents\nList of figures\nNotes on contributors\nAcknowledgements\nChapter 1: Current thinking – an introduction\n Introduction\n Situating electricity\n Articulations of electrification\n The structure and themes of the book\n Thinking through electricity\n Notes\n References\nChapter 2: Electricity is not a noun\n Not a thing, stolen\n The same story, again differently\n Thinking with things, for better or worse\n Of containers and turns of phrase\n A case in point\n Being in time\n Unwieldy\n Notes\n References\nChapter 3: Widened reason and deepened optimism: Electricity and morality in Durkheim’s anthropology and our own\n Automatic reactions\n Forces and feelings\n Collective powers\n The ideal of force\n A different constitution\n Reason and optimism\n Notes\n References\nChapter 4: No current: Electricity and disconnection in rural India\n No current\n The electric village\n To whom the current flows\n The solar future\n Only disconnect\n References\nChapter 5: What the e-bike tells us about the anthropology of energy\n Cycling routines\n Materiality\n Sensory stimuli\n Dependency\n Temporality\n Discussion\n Note\n References\nChapter 6: At the edge of the network of power in Japan, c. 1910s–1960s\n Not so much of a bright life: Electricity comes home\n ‘Consumers cheat companies’: Electricity theft and misappropriation\n Culture of safety and energy governmentality\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 7: Can the Mekong speak? On hydropower, models and ‘thing-power’\n Alternating currents: Electricity and climate change in anthropology\n Stopping one flow to start another\n Knowing the Mekong\n The ‘thing-power’ of models\n How to minimize the thing-power of dams\n The curve of electricity\n Can the Mekong speak?\n Notes\n References\nChapter 8: Electrification and the everyday spaces of state power in postcolonial Mozambique\n Electricity and the state\n Mozambique’s evolving energy provision system\n Electricity, contested territory and state power\n Statecraft and the practice and discourse of rural electrification\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 9: Big grid: The computing beast that preceded big data\n Big grid was before big data\n Big grid is an instance of big data\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 10: Touring the nuclear sublime: Power-plant tours as tools of government\n The technological sublime\n Sublime tourists and nuclear power\n The genealogy of openness\n Demonstrative safety and the controlled gaze\n The paradox of nuclear transparency\n Humanizing the industrial monster\n Managing human resources\n Conclusion\n Notes\n References\nChapter 11: Afterword: Electricity as inspiration – towards indeterminate interventions\n References\nIndex