Detailed Information on Publication Record
2006
Anthropology of Borders: work in progress
GRYGAR, JakubBasic information
Original name
Anthropology of Borders: work in progress
Name in Czech
Antropologie hranic: pracovní verze
Authors
GRYGAR, Jakub (203 Czech Republic, guarantor)
Edition
2006
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Uspořádání workshopu
Field of Study
Archaeology, anthropology, ethnology
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14230/06:00017891
Organization unit
Faculty of Social Studies
Keywords in English
anthropology; borders; power; culture; social memory
Tags
Tags
International impact
Změněno: 12/6/2007 16:13, doc. Mgr. Jakub Grygar, Ph.D.
V originále
The workshop addressed three questions about state borders: How historically established must the borders be in order to have influence? How homogeneous – encapsulated by state borders – are national cultures in character? How does one account for the changing regulatory capacity of transnational ties in the contemporary world? The issue we raise in the book is how state borders and borderlands act and how they become taken-for-granted, how they perform, how they are negotiated, discussed, invented, and/or, at the same time, how they are undermined, dismantled, de-constructed, and bridged over. In three thematic panels – power of / at the borders, borderland memories, and borderland cultures – the workshop presented case studies from Polish-Belarusian, Polish-Ukrainian, Czech-German, and Czech-Polish-Slovak borders.
In Czech
The workshop addressed three questions about state borders: How historically established must the borders be in order to have influence? How homogeneous – encapsulated by state borders – are national cultures in character? How does one account for the changing regulatory capacity of transnational ties in the contemporary world? The issue we raise in the book is how state borders and borderlands act and how they become taken-for-granted, how they perform, how they are negotiated, discussed, invented, and/or, at the same time, how they are undermined, dismantled, de-constructed, and bridged over. In three thematic panels – power of / at the borders, borderland memories, and borderland cultures – the workshop presented case studies from Polish-Belarusian, Polish-Ukrainian, Czech-German, and Czech-Polish-Slovak borders.