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Showing posts with label A. (subjects)-Social Sciences-Anthropology & Archaeology-(Claude Lévi_Strauss). Show all posts
Showing posts with label A. (subjects)-Social Sciences-Anthropology & Archaeology-(Claude Lévi_Strauss). Show all posts
2017-02-24
Structuralism, Hermeneutics, & Cassirer
source: Philosophical Overdose 2017年1月25日
The Continental Tradition - Ernst Cassirer, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Ferdinand de Saussure & Lévi-Strauss
2017-01-17
Structuralism in Social Sciences: Levi-Strauss and Roland Barthes (Contemporary Sociology Theory at METU) by Erdoğan Yıldırım
Course: Contemporary Sociology Theory -
WEEK 6 - The Structuralist Turn
WEEK 7 - Structuralism in Social Sciences: Levi-Strauss and Roland Barthes
Instructor: Assoc. Prof. Erdoğan Yıldırım
For Lecture Notes: http://ocw.metu.edu.tr/course/view.php?id=249
Instructor: Assoc. Prof. Erdoğan Yıldırım
For Lecture Notes: http://ocw.metu.edu.tr/course/view.php?id=249
2016-04-05
從憂鬱的熱帶之後—李維史陀神話
source: 衛城出版 2012年3月19日
探索法國系列講座
從文學、史地、思想與城市帶領讀者探索法國魅力
從憂鬱的熱帶之後—李維史陀神話
時間:2012/1/10(二)
地點:誠品台大店3F藝文閣樓
講者:楊照(作家、文化評論家)
主辦單位:衛城出版 http://www.facebook.com/acropolispublish
二○○九年以一百零一歲過世的李維史陀,一九五五年因出版《憂鬱的熱帶》而成名,這段整理自他三十歲之前在巴西叢林田野調查的經歷,成為他影響最多讀者與最多領域的著作,也使李維史陀後來遁入龐大的神話學研究,從李維史陀的一生,我們該如何理解這段經歷的關鍵位置,以及對他形塑結構主義思維的影響?研究神話入迷的李維史陀,他謎一般的心靈世界也成為二十世紀思想中的一則神話。
延伸閱讀:《李維史陀:實驗室裡的詩人》
http://www.books.com.tw/exep/prod/boo...
2016-03-29
Danilyn Rutherford: Structuralism and Materialism
source: WGSS OSU 2014年12月16日
The Ohio State University, Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies presents:
Professor Danilyn Rutherford, Department of Anthropology, University of California-Santa Cruz
Structuralism and Materialism
How does structuralism matter? How does it still matter at this centenary, well past its heyday in anthropology and the other so-called “sciences of man?” In this talk, I go out on a limb and offer a forceful and somewhat perverse response to this question. Certain premises associated with structuralism are at the heart of some of the most interesting new work in anthropology and related fields. I take as my starting point Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Elementary Structures of Kinship (1969) with a focus on moments where Lévi-Strauss finds himself compelled to tell us how kinship begins. I compare how Lévi-Strauss and more recent writers on kinship, sociality, and normativity treat what I call the matter of residence, the matter of relation, and the matter of difference. One part memoir, one part self-interested map of the lay of the land, my talk ends with some autoethnographic reflections on how the study of disability can contribute to debates over the nature of sign use and sociality. “There is nothing outside of language.” Structuralism might want to tell itself this, but it can’t avoid admitting awkward intruders of the sort I consider. These awkward intruders can lead us to a way of thinking about reality as both material and relational – material because relational through and through.
Professor Danilyn Rutherford (Anthropology, UC Santa Cruz) is a past president of the Society for Cultural Anthropology and former fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. She is the author of Laughing at Leviathan: Sovereignty and Audience in West Papua (U Chicago Press) and Raiding the Land of Foreigners: The Limits of the Nation on the Indonesian Frontier (Princeton UP). Her articles have appeared in Cultural Anthropology, Public Culture, American Ethnologist, and Comparative Studies in Society and History.
Sponsored by Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies
Co-sponsored with Anthropology, Comparative Studies, and Linguistics
2016-03-25
Anthropology & Symbols by Nicholas Herriman
# click the top-left icon to select videos from the playlist
source: Nicholas Herriman 2012年9月30日/ 上次更新:2013年11月6日
This lecture series covers some of the basic approaches anthropologists bring to the study of symbols. The series is designed for undergraduate students.
Anthropology & Symbols: (1 of 2) Victor Turner's Forked Stick 8:25
Anthropology & Symbols: (2 of 2) Victor Turner's Forked Stick 12:58
Anthropology & Symbols: (1 of 2) Sherry Ortner's Key Symbols 9:44
Anthropology & Symbols: (2 of 2) Sherry Ortner's Key Symbols 5:22
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (1 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:57
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (4 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:47
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (2 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:55
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (3 of 4) Structural Anthropology 5:53
Anthropology & Symbols: Clifford Geertz's key concepts 29:02
Anthropology & Symbols: Mary Douglas and Boundaries 16:50
source: Nicholas Herriman 2012年9月30日/ 上次更新:2013年11月6日
This lecture series covers some of the basic approaches anthropologists bring to the study of symbols. The series is designed for undergraduate students.
Anthropology & Symbols: (1 of 2) Victor Turner's Forked Stick 8:25
Anthropology & Symbols: (2 of 2) Victor Turner's Forked Stick 12:58
Anthropology & Symbols: (1 of 2) Sherry Ortner's Key Symbols 9:44
Anthropology & Symbols: (2 of 2) Sherry Ortner's Key Symbols 5:22
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (1 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:57
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (4 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:47
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (2 of 4) Structural Anthropology 9:55
Anthropology & Symbols: Levi-Strauss (3 of 4) Structural Anthropology 5:53
Anthropology & Symbols: Clifford Geertz's key concepts 29:02
Anthropology & Symbols: Mary Douglas and Boundaries 16:50
2016-02-01
Aspects of Postmodernism (Prep for Derrida's Of Grammatology) by Benjamin Hagen
# automatic playing for the 20 videos (click the up-left corner for the list)
source: Benjamin Hagen 上次更新日期:2014年9月5日
ENG 378 (Fall 2013): Aspects of Postmodernism
01/07/2014: These video lectures supplemented my Fall 2013 course at the University of Rhode Island, ENG 378: Aspects of Postmodernism. During the semester we read six "postmodern" novels as well as chapters from Jacques Derrida's /Of Grammatology/. Because Derrida's work was a more daunting reading task than our novels, I decided to supplement our readings and discussions with these lectures in order to give students (especially those unfamiliar with continental philosophy or literary theory) a few in-roads to an otherwise overwhelming book.
The six novels we also studied were:
1). B.S. Johnson's /Christie Malry's Own Double-Entry/
2). Paula Fox's /Desperate Characters/
3). Carole Maso's /The Art Lover/
4). David Mitchell's /Cloud Atlas/
5). China Miéville's /The City & The City/
6). Sheila Heti's /How Should a Person Be?/
(Part 1.1): The Title 11:57
(Part 1.2): The Future... 7:22
(Part 1.3): The "Exergue" and Logocentrism 14:39
(Part 1.4): Beginning Chapter 1 14:58
(Part 2.1): Notes on Style and Syntax 14:02
(Part 2.2): Saussure, Signs, and "The Signifier of the Signifier" 15:44
(Part 2.3): Summarizing Chapter One (Sort of...) 30:27
(Part 3.1): What is this book about again... ? 23:35
(Part 3.2): Deconstruction 28:36
(Part 4): Rousseau, Lévi-Strauss, Structuralism 25:54
(Part 5): Tracing the Trace 33:46
(Part 6.1): Difference and Differance 18:53
(Part 6.2): The Problem of Origins 18:42
(Part 6.3): Origination and Articulation 36:06
(7.1): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 1) 14:59
(7.2): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 2) 19:04
(Part 7.3): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 3) 26:29
(8.1): Writing, Naming, and Violence 17:02
(8.2): Writing, Naming, Violence 16:24
(8.3): Writing, Naming, Violence 20:27
source: Benjamin Hagen 上次更新日期:2014年9月5日
ENG 378 (Fall 2013): Aspects of Postmodernism
01/07/2014: These video lectures supplemented my Fall 2013 course at the University of Rhode Island, ENG 378: Aspects of Postmodernism. During the semester we read six "postmodern" novels as well as chapters from Jacques Derrida's /Of Grammatology/. Because Derrida's work was a more daunting reading task than our novels, I decided to supplement our readings and discussions with these lectures in order to give students (especially those unfamiliar with continental philosophy or literary theory) a few in-roads to an otherwise overwhelming book.
The six novels we also studied were:
1). B.S. Johnson's /Christie Malry's Own Double-Entry/
2). Paula Fox's /Desperate Characters/
3). Carole Maso's /The Art Lover/
4). David Mitchell's /Cloud Atlas/
5). China Miéville's /The City & The City/
6). Sheila Heti's /How Should a Person Be?/
(Part 1.1): The Title 11:57
(Part 1.2): The Future... 7:22
(Part 1.3): The "Exergue" and Logocentrism 14:39
(Part 1.4): Beginning Chapter 1 14:58
(Part 2.1): Notes on Style and Syntax 14:02
(Part 2.2): Saussure, Signs, and "The Signifier of the Signifier" 15:44
(Part 2.3): Summarizing Chapter One (Sort of...) 30:27
(Part 3.1): What is this book about again... ? 23:35
(Part 3.2): Deconstruction 28:36
(Part 4): Rousseau, Lévi-Strauss, Structuralism 25:54
(Part 5): Tracing the Trace 33:46
(Part 6.1): Difference and Differance 18:53
(Part 6.2): The Problem of Origins 18:42
(Part 6.3): Origination and Articulation 36:06
(7.1): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 1) 14:59
(7.2): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 2) 19:04
(Part 7.3): Reviewing Part I (Chapter 3) 26:29
(8.1): Writing, Naming, and Violence 17:02
(8.2): Writing, Naming, Violence 16:24
(8.3): Writing, Naming, Violence 20:27
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