This Afterword is part apologia for an ontology-centred approach to the anthropology of wonder, part diplomatic mission to bring the articles in this special issue into dialogue to yield new insights about wonder. The latter endeavor identifies five key areas in which the articles enhance understanding about wonder. First, they help to clarify the relationship between wonder and socio-political change. Second, they present ethnographic examples of what makes wonder practices work. Elsewhere, I have suggested that wonder can be a practice through which people resist existing ontological premises and advance lived alternatives. Going beyond this observation, these articles disclose how wonder practices persist and become routinized. Third, th...
Focusing on disenchantment, sociology undertheorizes wonder. Our analysis of 30 interviews is the fi...
In terms of intervening in embodied experience, medical treatment is wonder-ful in its ambition and ...
What constitutes ‘Wonder’ and what stands in the way of it? The more Sanderson and Dettmers explore...
This paper presents a phenomenology of wonder through careful description of the internal state of w...
This article lays out a general thesis for the development of a comparative ethnographic approach to...
Wonder has had a rich and diverse history in the western philosophical tradition. Both Plato and Ari...
Wonder plays a role in many aspects of our lives—e.g., in appreciating art and nature, rel...
Peter Marchand claims that understanding is contradictory to wonder, describing only two Sub-Rasas o...
This paper examines the role of awe and wonder in scientific practice. Drawing on evidence...
WONDER is an exploration of the point at which what we know and what we think we know begins to brea...
What generates wonder, and what can wonder engender in terms of religious, political, and broader so...
Is it possible to distinguish, as sociologist Arthur Frank proposes, an ‘ideal of wonder’ within whi...
This essay emerged from an exhibition in 2006 in which notions of the Wunderkammer became central in...
The article aims to be theoretical, and to consider the impact of the word "ontology" in anthropolog...
One of the vexed questions in the philosophy of wonder and indeed education is how to ensure that th...
Focusing on disenchantment, sociology undertheorizes wonder. Our analysis of 30 interviews is the fi...
In terms of intervening in embodied experience, medical treatment is wonder-ful in its ambition and ...
What constitutes ‘Wonder’ and what stands in the way of it? The more Sanderson and Dettmers explore...
This paper presents a phenomenology of wonder through careful description of the internal state of w...
This article lays out a general thesis for the development of a comparative ethnographic approach to...
Wonder has had a rich and diverse history in the western philosophical tradition. Both Plato and Ari...
Wonder plays a role in many aspects of our lives—e.g., in appreciating art and nature, rel...
Peter Marchand claims that understanding is contradictory to wonder, describing only two Sub-Rasas o...
This paper examines the role of awe and wonder in scientific practice. Drawing on evidence...
WONDER is an exploration of the point at which what we know and what we think we know begins to brea...
What generates wonder, and what can wonder engender in terms of religious, political, and broader so...
Is it possible to distinguish, as sociologist Arthur Frank proposes, an ‘ideal of wonder’ within whi...
This essay emerged from an exhibition in 2006 in which notions of the Wunderkammer became central in...
The article aims to be theoretical, and to consider the impact of the word "ontology" in anthropolog...
One of the vexed questions in the philosophy of wonder and indeed education is how to ensure that th...
Focusing on disenchantment, sociology undertheorizes wonder. Our analysis of 30 interviews is the fi...
In terms of intervening in embodied experience, medical treatment is wonder-ful in its ambition and ...
What constitutes ‘Wonder’ and what stands in the way of it? The more Sanderson and Dettmers explore...