Skip to main content
European Commission logo print header

Making Selves, Making Revolutions: Comparative Anthropologies of Revolutionary Politics

Obiettivo

What kinds of self does it take to make a revolution? And how does revolutionary politics, understood as a project of personal as much as political transformation, articulate with other processes of self-making, such as religious practices? Comparative Anthropologies of Revolutionary Politics (CARP) seeks fundamentally to recast our understanding of revolutions, using their relationship to religious practices in diverse social and cultural settings as a lens through which to reveal revolutions’ varied capacities for self-making. Developing a comparative matrix of revolutionary settings in the Middle East, Latin America and elsewhere, CARP’s core objective is to investigate the differing permutations and dynamics of revolutionary ‘anthropologies’ in the original theological sense of the term, i.e. charting revolutionary politics in relation to varying conceptions of what it is to be human, and of how the horizons of people’s lives are to be understood in relation to divine orders of different kinds, in order to reveal how revolutions come to define what persons may be, deliberately setting the social, political, cultural and ultimately ontological coordinates within which people are made who they are. Bringing close ethnographic investigation to bear on conceptions of revolution, statecraft, and subjectivity in political theory, CARP will produce comprehensive political ethnographies of nine major case-studies, comparing systematically the relationship between revolution and religion in a selection of countries in the Middle East and Latin America. Four smaller-scale case-studies from Europe and Asia will add complementary dimensions to this comparative matrix. Providing much-needed empirical materials and analytical insight into the dynamic comingling of political and religious forms in the making of revolutionary selves, CARP’s ultimate ambition is to launch the comparative study of revolutionary politics as a major new departure for anthropological research.

Invito a presentare proposte

ERC-2013-CoG
Vedi altri progetti per questo bando

Meccanismo di finanziamento

ERC-CG - ERC Consolidator Grants

Istituzione ospitante

UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
Contributo UE
€ 1 854 472,00
Indirizzo
GOWER STREET
WC1E 6BT London
Regno Unito

Mostra sulla mappa

Regione
London Inner London — West Camden and City of London
Tipo di attività
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Contatto amministrativo
Giles Machell (Mr.)
Ricercatore principale
Martin Holbraad (Dr.)
Collegamenti
Costo totale
Nessun dato

Beneficiari (1)