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Simmel and Slovak Village Shops

Identifikátory výsledku

  • Kód výsledku v IS VaVaI

    <a href="https://www.isvavai.cz/riv?ss=detail&h=RIV%2F00216224%3A14230%2F06%3A00036114" target="_blank" >RIV/00216224:14230/06:00036114 - isvavai.cz</a>

  • Výsledek na webu

  • DOI - Digital Object Identifier

Alternativní jazyky

  • Jazyk výsledku

    angličtina

  • Název v původním jazyce

    Simmel and Slovak Village Shops

  • Popis výsledku v původním jazyce

    From the viewpoint of the villagers, the past shops were historically interlinked with otherness and outside, embodied either by the Jewish shop and innkeepers or by the socialist state. Drawing on broader ethnographic research concerning retail and shopping , this paper will explore how shops conceived of and conceptualised today, when there is no stranger (Simmel 1971) there, and the shops are owned and operated mostly by the villagers themselves. Overall the wider theoretical concern of the paper isto demonstrate that the more simplistic dualism that asserts modern commerce as somehow intrinsically opposed to spirituality and the construction of village community (Simmel 1978, 1991) needs to be reconsidered. In this paper I shall argue that there are many ways in which the shops and the activity of shopping do not oppose but actually complement and contribute to the project through which the village attempts to construct itself as a viable and in many ways holistic community.

  • Název v anglickém jazyce

    Simmel and Slovak Village Shops

  • Popis výsledku anglicky

    From the viewpoint of the villagers, the past shops were historically interlinked with otherness and outside, embodied either by the Jewish shop and innkeepers or by the socialist state. Drawing on broader ethnographic research concerning retail and shopping , this paper will explore how shops conceived of and conceptualised today, when there is no stranger (Simmel 1971) there, and the shops are owned and operated mostly by the villagers themselves. Overall the wider theoretical concern of the paper isto demonstrate that the more simplistic dualism that asserts modern commerce as somehow intrinsically opposed to spirituality and the construction of village community (Simmel 1978, 1991) needs to be reconsidered. In this paper I shall argue that there are many ways in which the shops and the activity of shopping do not oppose but actually complement and contribute to the project through which the village attempts to construct itself as a viable and in many ways holistic community.

Klasifikace

  • Druh

    O - Ostatní výsledky

  • CEP obor

    AC - Archeologie, antropologie, etnologie

  • OECD FORD obor

Návaznosti výsledku

  • Projekt

  • Návaznosti

    V - Vyzkumna aktivita podporovana z jinych verejnych zdroju

Ostatní

  • Rok uplatnění

    2006

  • Kód důvěrnosti údajů

    S - Úplné a pravdivé údaje o projektu nepodléhají ochraně podle zvláštních právních předpisů