WILEY

KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

WILEY - KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

United States Change Location

cart.gif CART |  MY ACCOUNT |  CONTACT US |  HELP    
Wiley.com
Global Assemblages: Technology, Politics, and Ethics as Anthropological Problems (1405123583) cover image
Global Assemblages: Technology, Politics, and Ethics as Anthropological Problems
Aihwa Ong (Editor), Stephen J. Collier (Editor)
ISBN: 978-1-4051-2358-7
Paperback
512 pages
October 2004, Wiley-Blackwell
US $51.95 Add to Cart

This price is valid for United States. Change location to view local pricing and availability.

This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 2-3 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.

  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • Author Information
  • Hallmark Features
  • Reviews
“This compelling book demonstrates how a very sophisticated anthropological perspective can transform ‘globalization’ into a useful tool for investigating emerging social forms and ways of ruling and living. Certainly this non-structural approach is needed—one that attends to the specificity of combinations, interactions, sites, and effects associated with the spread of technology and risk.”

Ulrich Beck, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München


Global Assemblages provides excellent and rich insight into a developing anthropology of the contemporary world. The intertwining of violence, capital flows, political fragmentation, and regimes of social and moral control are investigated here in what must be recognized as a major contribution to anthropological scholarship.”

Jonathan Friedman, L’ École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris and Lund University, Sweden


“This volume will give assemblages of many types a good name—the authors are astute, varied, and at the top of their game; the geographies do justice to the notion of global; and the book has a core intellectual inquiry about reflexive practices that holds together its wide-ranging essays. From transplanted kidneys to research audit protocols, the uneasy interrelationships of global assemblages emerge in the fleshy details of a knotted world.”

Donna Haraway, University of California, Santa Cruz

Share This    Printer-ready version