Why Muslim women and smartphones : mirror images / Karen Waltorp.

Waltorp, Karen,
Why Muslim women and smartphones :
Erişim Adresi
Taylor & Francis Link
OCLC metadata license agreement Link
ISBN
9781003087380 (electronic bk.)
1003087388 (electronic bk.)
9781000189308 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
1000189309 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket)
9781000185829 (electronic bk. : PDF)
1000185826 (electronic bk. : PDF)
9781350127357
9781000182644 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
1000182649 (electronic bk. : EPUB)
Dil Kodu
İngilizce
Yayın Bilgisi
Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.
Fiziksel Niteleme
1 online resource (200 pages) : illustrations
Genel Not
"First published 2020 by Bloomsbury Academic."
İçindekiler Notu
Foreword bySarah Pink. Acknowledgements. Introduction: al-Harakat. Image List. Playlist. A. Smartphone Affordances of the Smartphone. Touch and Crucial Connectivity. Secrets and Smartphones a. Cyborg Cyborg Ethics for an Accountable Multi-modal Anthropology. Kitab al-Manazir and Cyborg Optics. Parallax as a Harakat Move and a Speaking Nearby B. Hanan al-Noerrebro: Affections for the Neighborhood An Urban Habitat - a Typical Blaagaarden Girl. The Ghetto, the Square, Behind the Curtain. Facebook Flirt: The Stabbing of Taher b. What's in a Field Enacting Hybridity. Harakat and Composite Habitus. Perceiving Affordances C. Hijab, Desire, Social Control Entanglements of Free Speech and Veiled Women. 'Playing with the Scarf is Playing with Our Religion'. Modest/Desire. Orientalism, Freedom, State Control. Smartphone as Valve and Part-revolution? Freedom/Choice. So Muslim Women Need Saving? D. Dreams and the Imaginal realm - Alam al-Mîthal The Kidnapping. Moral/Laws. Sab'r enacted and shared in social media. Images and Mirrors. Imaginal realm and Virtuality. Composite Habitus. The Flow of (Mirror) Images and Future-Making. Bibliography. Index.
Özet, vb.
Using an assemblage approach to study how Muslim women in Norrebro, Denmark use their phones, Karen Waltorp examines how social media complicates the divide between public and private in relation to a group of people who find this distinction of utmost significance. Building on years of ethnographic fieldwork, Waltorp's ethnography reflects the trust and creativity of her relationships with these women which in turn open up nuanced discussions about both the subject at hand and best practice in conducting anthropological research. Combining rich ethnography with theoretical contextualization, Waltorp's book alternates between ethnography and analysis to illuminate a thoroughly modern community, and reveals the capacity of image-making technology to function as an infrastructure for seeing, thinking and engaging in fieldwork as an anthropologists. Waltorp identifies a series of important issues around anthropological approaches to new media, contributing to new debates around the anthropology of automation, data and self-tracking.
Konu
Muslim women __ Denmark.
Smartphones __ Denmark.
Social media __ Denmark.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General __ bisacsh
PHOTOGRAPHY / Techniques / Digital (see also COMPUTERS / Computer Graphics / Image Processing) __ bisacsh
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural __ bisacsh
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