An international conference is a secular ritual which serves to create, recreate and shape global-wide translocal cultural sharings. Social anthropological theories and methods are used to show that, besides being an information flow junction, the international conference is a network crossroad and a way of socialising new members into aninternational research community. It is also capable of creating prestige and honour for the individual researcher,for the arranging research team, university and city. Rituals do not merely reflect the social relations or cosmology of a society, but are events that in themselves do important things through ritual forms and symbolic statements
The field of art education hardly qualifies as a tribal society. Nevertheless, there are some “triba...
Increasing economic globalization creates conflicts that can only be constructively managed if indiv...
The article employs anthropological ritual theory and the concepts of symbolism and liminality to pr...
An international conference is a secular ritual which serves to create, recreate and shape global-wi...
Anthropologists like Victor Turner and Edward Bruner focus their attention on the experience of expe...
In the contemporary network society, attracting public attention has become more challenging as the ...
This article explores performance and ritual theory in the context of anthropological research on pe...
International audienceSociologists have long been interested in the theoretical possibility of a uni...
Rituals of different peoples of the contemporary world are presented in the article, perceived as a ...
A theoretical construct developed within the framework of communications theory, the ritual view con...
This piece draws on ethnographic experience at various hacker conferences to rethink how face-to-fac...
Ritual dynamics is the title of a new research program and of an international congress recently hel...
Pilgrimages and Sanctuaries: Art, Music and Rituals 11-12 November 2011 Organized by The Centro Inco...
International audienceInternational scientific associations and conferences are commonly assumed to ...
Item does not contain fulltextTo improve the quality in teaching and learning, opportunities need to...
The field of art education hardly qualifies as a tribal society. Nevertheless, there are some “triba...
Increasing economic globalization creates conflicts that can only be constructively managed if indiv...
The article employs anthropological ritual theory and the concepts of symbolism and liminality to pr...
An international conference is a secular ritual which serves to create, recreate and shape global-wi...
Anthropologists like Victor Turner and Edward Bruner focus their attention on the experience of expe...
In the contemporary network society, attracting public attention has become more challenging as the ...
This article explores performance and ritual theory in the context of anthropological research on pe...
International audienceSociologists have long been interested in the theoretical possibility of a uni...
Rituals of different peoples of the contemporary world are presented in the article, perceived as a ...
A theoretical construct developed within the framework of communications theory, the ritual view con...
This piece draws on ethnographic experience at various hacker conferences to rethink how face-to-fac...
Ritual dynamics is the title of a new research program and of an international congress recently hel...
Pilgrimages and Sanctuaries: Art, Music and Rituals 11-12 November 2011 Organized by The Centro Inco...
International audienceInternational scientific associations and conferences are commonly assumed to ...
Item does not contain fulltextTo improve the quality in teaching and learning, opportunities need to...
The field of art education hardly qualifies as a tribal society. Nevertheless, there are some “triba...
Increasing economic globalization creates conflicts that can only be constructively managed if indiv...
The article employs anthropological ritual theory and the concepts of symbolism and liminality to pr...