This Currents section provides accounts of Britain’s exit (Brexit) or departure from the European Union (EU)—a decision based on a closely won referendum in June 2016, and declared in January 2020 by the Conservative political party. With few exceptions, the views and experiences of those excluded from dominant narratives of “the people” have not been substantially considered in mainstream nor indeed anthropological debates. Contributors to the section offer (auto-)ethnographic perspectives on the legacies and implications of empire, nationalism, racism, cultural diversity, gender, and generational divides made explicit in Brexit phenomena. They range from trolling women of color, the repercussions of race and racism in academia, culturally...
Like the rest of this volume, this paper emerges out of the 2016 annual meeting of the Association o...
A thesis submitted to the Undergraduate Studies Committee of the Department of History of Rice Unive...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
This Currents section provides accounts of Britain’s exit (Brexit) or departure from the European Un...
This paper foregrounds an understanding of Brexit as unexceptional, as business as usual in Britain ...
This timely series of interventions scrutinises the centrality of race and migration to the 2016 Bre...
© 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. This accepted manuscript sample chapter is made available under t...
No event in recent British political history has generated the level of despondency, exhilaration an...
Brexit has brought into visibility various strands of racist thinking and practice that have, for ma...
On January 31, 2020, the UK left the European Union. Since the 2016 referendum, there has been a sig...
After the shock decision to leave the EU in 2016, what can we learn about our divided and increasing...
On January 31, 2020, the UK left the European Union. Since the 2016 referendum, there has been a sig...
Brexit has brought into visibility various strands of racist thinking and practice that have, for ma...
A collaborative ebook on the effects of the Brexit vote on the UK's cultural sector and its agents: ...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
Like the rest of this volume, this paper emerges out of the 2016 annual meeting of the Association o...
A thesis submitted to the Undergraduate Studies Committee of the Department of History of Rice Unive...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
This Currents section provides accounts of Britain’s exit (Brexit) or departure from the European Un...
This paper foregrounds an understanding of Brexit as unexceptional, as business as usual in Britain ...
This timely series of interventions scrutinises the centrality of race and migration to the 2016 Bre...
© 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited. This accepted manuscript sample chapter is made available under t...
No event in recent British political history has generated the level of despondency, exhilaration an...
Brexit has brought into visibility various strands of racist thinking and practice that have, for ma...
On January 31, 2020, the UK left the European Union. Since the 2016 referendum, there has been a sig...
After the shock decision to leave the EU in 2016, what can we learn about our divided and increasing...
On January 31, 2020, the UK left the European Union. Since the 2016 referendum, there has been a sig...
Brexit has brought into visibility various strands of racist thinking and practice that have, for ma...
A collaborative ebook on the effects of the Brexit vote on the UK's cultural sector and its agents: ...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...
Like the rest of this volume, this paper emerges out of the 2016 annual meeting of the Association o...
A thesis submitted to the Undergraduate Studies Committee of the Department of History of Rice Unive...
Anthropologists and other commentators struggle to make sense of pre-COVID-19 political developments...