A Chat with Chatty Artefacts. Introduction to topic

Authors

  • Jernej Mlekuž

Keywords:

artefacts, material culture, culture, social relations, language

Abstract

Chatty artefacts are posited as a central interpretive tool in the understanding of society, social relations and culture. But we should not be misled by this conception. Chatty artefacts refer not only to specific groups, but are also a constitutive part of social relations. Material culture, as this introductory text attempts to conceptualize it, is therefore not merely some sort of medium for social relations, but is a component part of social relations.

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Author Biography

Jernej Mlekuž

Doktor znanosti, Inštitut za slovensko izseljenstvo in migracije ZRC SAZU, Novi trg 2, SI-1000 Ljubljana

References

Appadurai, Arjun (1986). Introduction: Commodities and the Politics of Value. The Social Life of Things. Commodities in Cultural Perspective (ur. Arjun Appadurai). Cambridge in New York: Cambridge University Press, 3–63.

Bourdieu, Pierre (2002). Praktični čut I, II. Ljubljana: Studia Humanitatis.

Douglas, Mary in Baron Isherwood (1980). The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption. London in New York: Routledge.

Miller, Daniel (1987). Material Culture and Mass Consumption. Oxford in New York: Blackwell.

Miller, Daniel (1994). Artefacts and the Meaning of Things. Companion Encyclopedia of Anthropology (ur. Tim Ingold). London in New York: Routledge, 396–419.

Miller, Daniel (1998). Why some things matter. Material cultures. Why some things matter (ur. Daniel Miller). London: UCL Press, 3–21.

Wittgenstein, Ludwig (1980). Filozofska iztraživanja. Nolit: Beograd.

Published

2010-01-01

How to Cite

Mlekuž, J. . (2010). A Chat with Chatty Artefacts. Introduction to topic. Two Homelands, (31). Retrieved from https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/twohomelands/article/view/11051

Issue

Section

Articles