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An Overheated World

An Anthropological History of the Early Twenty-first Century

Thomas Hylland Eriksen

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Hardback

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English
Routledge
27 July 2017
Although economic, cultural and demographic changes are part and parcel of the modern world, changes in a number of areas have accelerated in the last quarter-century – a period sometimes spoken of as the global information society, a world of ‘liquid modernity’ – or of fully-fledged global neoliberalism associated with deregulation, flexible accumulation and financialisation.

At a global level, some of the substantial areas where change has accelerated are, apart from the spectacular spread of new information technology, tourism, foreign direct investment, urbanisation, resource extraction through mining, energy use, species extinction, displacement, and international trade. These and other changes are, needless to say, perceived and acted upon differently in different countries and localities, and in order to understand the implications of the present acceleration of history, they have to be explored locally.

This book gives a compelling perspective on the contemporary, ‘overheated’ world, presenting ethnographic material from many countries and weaving the local and particular together with large-scale global acceleration. This book was first published as a special issue of History and Anthropology.

Edited by:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 174mm, 
Weight:   430g
ISBN:   9781138742222
ISBN 10:   1138742228
Pages:   152
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary ,  A / AS level
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"1. Overheating: the world since 1991 2. Building a city: Korean capitalists and navy nostalgia in ""overheated"" Subic Bay 3. Mining, expectations and turbulent times: locating accelerated change in rural Sierra Leone 4. Temporalities, time and the everyday: new technology as a marker of change in an Estonian mine 5. The refugee crisis: destabilizing and restabilizing European borders 6. From coal to Ukip: the struggle over identity in post-industrial Doncaster 7. Dreams of growth and fear of water crisis: the ambivalence of ""progress"" in the Majes-Siguas Irrigation Project, Peru 8. Creating and dissolving social groups from New Guinea to New York: on the overheating of bounded corporate entities in contemporary global capitalism 9. Overheated Underdogs: Civilizational Analysis and Migration on the Danube-Tisza Interfluve"

Thomas Hylland Eriksen is a Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo and was PI of the ERC AdvGR project 'Overheating' (2012–2017).

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