Google apps
Main menu

Post a Comment On: Understanding Society

"Localism and assemblage theory"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Dan said...

If you want an excellent example of the payoffs of the ANT approach, I recommend Callon et al.'s recent work on economics (see, for example, Do Economists Make Markets?. Even more so, I recommend Annemarie Mol's book The Body Multiple: Ontology in Medical Practice. Mol's twin narratives (one ethnographic, one reflexive and academic) do an excellent job of both explaining what the ANT-ish approach gets you and what other approaches leave out in producing a compelling narrative of how bodies are enacted in clinic and pathology labs. I can't recommend the book highly enough (especially the first 3 chapters and the last).

November 14, 2009 at 9:25 AM

Anonymous Alex said...

I think this does have applications.

For instance, consider the work of Elinor Ostrom, the recent joint winner of the "Nobel Prize" in Economics, on the commons.

A lot of discussion of her work went around the media and the blogosphere as "tragedy of the commons is false (at least in some situations)". Her work showed that some places where you may expect a "tragedy" over a common resource, that does not happen, as the people manage to voluntarily solve the problem. This is without privatization and then regulation by a government, or simple nationalization by a government, as may have been expected with the original theory.

But this discussion overlooks what you discuss here. Because a government is just a collection of social actors. So if a government solves a problem with the commons, say by nationalizing it, how much different is that really to the individual actors coming to some understanding over the commons as Ostrom describes?

November 16, 2009 at 4:13 PM

Anonymous Lukas said...

Thank you very much for this illuminating post. The (possible) convergence between Deleuzian and Latourian ontology is a topic which deserves more (methodological) attention, I think.
One question: I would really like to download the book with all your posts, but for some reasons the link does not work / the file does not open..

September 7, 2010 at 6:24 AM

Blogger Dan Little said...

Lukas,

Thanks for your comment. I'm not having a problem downloading and opening the PDF version. What specifically happens when you try to download? It is a 40 megabyte file, so it takes a while to download.

September 7, 2010 at 8:27 AM

You can use some HTML tags, such as <b>, <i>, <a>

Comment moderation has been enabled. All comments must be approved by the blog author.

You will be asked to sign in after submitting your comment.
Please prove you're not a robot