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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Bernadette Nadya Jaworsky , Radka Klvanová , Alica Synek Rétiová , Ivana Rapoš BožicPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Lexington Books Dimensions: Width: 15.90cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 23.70cm Weight: 0.508kg ISBN: 9781666927412ISBN 10: 1666927414 Pages: 214 Publication Date: 24 July 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction. A Critical Cultural Sociology of Attitudes toward Migration Chapter 1. Foreigner, Migrant, Refugee: What Lies Beneath the Labels Chapter 2. Looking at Images of People Who Cross Borders: Visuality, Emotions, and the Civil Sphere Chapter 3. Threat, Victim, or Enrichment: Patterns of Securitization in Migration Attitudes Chapter 4. Migration as Invasion: The Role of Media in Shaping Migration Attitudes Chapter 5. Going Local with Migration Attitudes: Multiplicity in Hierarchies of Otherness Chapter 6. Moving Beyond the Fear of the “Thirteenth Migrant” Appendix. Reflecting Upon Our Research JourneyReviews"""A Critical Cultural Sociological Exploration of Attitudes toward Migration in Czechia deals with a highly topical subject, and its findings are valuable, and not only in the context of Central and Eastern Europe. Although much attention is currently being paid to migration attitudes, this book, based on the lens of cultural sociology, is in many ways original. Through the study of symbolic boundaries, boundary work, and cultural repertoires, the book offers deeper insights into formation of migration attitudes, unpacks their various nuances, and situates them within a broader cultural framework.""--Karel Čada, Charles University ""This excellent book brings us closer to a deeper understanding of one of our time's most pressing issues within, as well as beyond, Czech society--the formation of migration attitudes. With nuanced analysis and creative methodology, the authors take the readers into the historical and contextual roles of the landscapes of meaning that shape the boundary makings of the 'other' and the unproblematic 'we.' By utilizing visual, labeling, and media analysis through the lens of critical cultural sociology, the book also advances the cultural sociological theorization of migration studies.""--Anna Lund, Stockholm University ""This is a major work, one that brings together nuanced multilevel research at the empirical level and strikingly new theorizing at the middle range. It is a landmark in the sociology of immigration.""--Jeffrey Alexander, Yale University ""A fascinating, theoretically-grounded and empirically-rich answer to questions about why migrants loom so large when they make up such a small percentage of the actual population. An invaluable contribution to how 'migration attitudes' form, why they are so stubbornly intractable, and how they are deeply rooted in specific socio-historical contexts.""--Peggy Levitt, author of Transnational Social Protection: Changing Social Welfare in a World on the Move" """A fascinating, theoretically grounded, and empirically rich answer to questions about why migrants loom so large when they make up such a small percentage of the actual population. An invaluable contribution to how 'migration attitudes' form, why they are so stubbornly intractable, and how they are deeply rooted in specific socio-historical contexts."" ""A Critical Cultural Sociological Exploration of Attitudes toward Migration in Czechia deals with a highly topical subject. Its findings are valuable, and not only in the context of Central and Eastern Europe. Although much attention is currently being paid to migration attitudes, this book, based on the lens of cultural sociology, is original in many ways. Through the study of symbolic boundaries, boundary work, and cultural repertoires, it offers deeper insights into the formation of migration attitudes, unpacks their various nuances, and situates them within a broader cultural framework."" ""This excellent book brings us closer to a deeper understanding of one of our time's most pressing issues within, as well as beyond, Czech society--the formation of migration attitudes. With nuanced analysis and creative methodology, the authors take the readers into the historical and contextual roles of the landscapes of meaning that shape the boundary makings of the 'other' and the unproblematic 'we.' By utilizing visual, labeling, and media analysis through the lens of critical cultural sociology, this book also advances the cultural sociological theorization of migration studies."" ""This is a major work, one that brings together nuanced multilevel research at the empirical level and strikingly new theorizing at the middle range. It is a landmark in the sociology of immigration.""" ""This is a major work, one that brings together nuanced multilevel research at the empirical level and strikingly new theorizing at the middle range. It is a landmark in the sociology of immigration."" --Jeffrey Alexander, Yale University ""A fascinating, theoretically grounded, and empirically rich answer to questions about why migrants loom so large when they make up such a small percentage of the actual population. An invaluable contribution to how 'migration attitudes' form, why they are so stubbornly intractable, and how they are deeply rooted in specific socio-historical contexts."" --Peggy Levitt, author of Transnational Social Protection: Changing Social Welfare in a World on the Move ""This excellent book brings us closer to a deeper understanding of one of our time's most pressing issues within, as well as beyond, Czech society--the formation of migration attitudes. With nuanced analysis and creative methodology, the authors take the readers into the historical and contextual roles of the landscapes of meaning that shape the boundary makings of the 'other' and the unproblematic 'we.' By utilizing visual, labeling, and media analysis through the lens of critical cultural sociology, this book also advances the cultural sociological theorization of migration studies."" --Anna Lund, Stockholm University ""A Critical Cultural Sociological Exploration of Attitudes toward Migration in Czechia deals with a highly topical subject. Its findings are valuable, and not only in the context of Central and Eastern Europe. Although much attention is currently being paid to migration attitudes, this book, based on the lens of cultural sociology, is original in many ways. Through the study of symbolic boundaries, boundary work, and cultural repertoires, it offers deeper insights into the formation of migration attitudes, unpacks their various nuances, and situates them within a broader cultural framework."" --Karel Cada, Charles University """This is a major work, one that brings together nuanced multilevel research at the empirical level and strikingly new theorizing at the middle range. It is a landmark in the sociology of immigration.""--Jeffrey Alexander, Yale University ""A fascinating, theoretically-grounded and empirically-rich answer to questions about why migrants loom so large when they make up such a small percentage of the actual population. An invaluable contribution to how 'migration attitudes' form, why they are so stubbornly intractable, and how they are deeply rooted in specific socio-historical contexts.""--Peggy Levitt, author of Transnational Social Protection: Changing Social Welfare in a World on the Move" """A fascinating, theoretically grounded, and empirically rich answer to questions about why migrants loom so large when they make up such a small percentage of the actual population. An invaluable contribution to how 'migration attitudes' form, why they are so stubbornly intractable, and how they are deeply rooted in specific socio-historical contexts."" --Peggy Levitt, author of Transnational Social Protection: Changing Social Welfare in a World on the Move ""A Critical Cultural Sociological Exploration of Attitudes toward Migration in Czechia deals with a highly topical subject. Its findings are valuable, and not only in the context of Central and Eastern Europe. Although much attention is currently being paid to migration attitudes, this book, based on the lens of cultural sociology, is original in many ways. Through the study of symbolic boundaries, boundary work, and cultural repertoires, it offers deeper insights into the formation of migration attitudes, unpacks their various nuances, and situates them within a broader cultural framework."" --Karel Cada, Charles University ""This excellent book brings us closer to a deeper understanding of one of our time's most pressing issues within, as well as beyond, Czech society--the formation of migration attitudes. With nuanced analysis and creative methodology, the authors take the readers into the historical and contextual roles of the landscapes of meaning that shape the boundary makings of the 'other' and the unproblematic 'we.' By utilizing visual, labeling, and media analysis through the lens of critical cultural sociology, this book also advances the cultural sociological theorization of migration studies."" --Anna Lund, Stockholm University ""This is a major work, one that brings together nuanced multilevel research at the empirical level and strikingly new theorizing at the middle range. It is a landmark in the sociology of immigration."" --Jeffrey Alexander, Yale University" Author InformationBernadette Nadya Jaworsky is associate professor of sociology at Masaryk University, Brno, Czechia, and Faculty Fellow at Yale University’s Center for Cultural Sociology. Radka Klvanová is assistant professor at the Department of Law and Humanities at Mendel University in Brno, Czechia. Alica Synek?Rétiová is assistant professor of sociology at Masaryk University in Brno, Czechia. Ivana Rapoš Božic is post-doctoral researcher and lecturer at Masaryk University in Brno, Czechia. Jan Krotký is post-doctoral researcher in the Institute of Political Science at the University of Wroclaw, Poland. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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