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OverviewThis volume puts ambiguity and its generative power at the centre of analytical attention. Rather than being cast negatively as a source of confusion, bewilderment or as a dangerous portent, ambiguity is held as the source of the dynamic between knowledge and experience and of certainty amid uncertainty. It positions human life between the realms of mystery and mastery where ambiguity is understood as the experience and expression of life and part of navigating the human condition. In turn, the tension between the tradition in anthropology of examining cultural certitudes through ethnographic description and efforts to challenge dominant expressions of incertitude are explored. Each chapter presents ethnographic accounts of how people engage individually and collectively with the self, the other, human-made institutions and the more-than-human to navigate ambiguity in a world affected by viral contagion, climate change, economic instability, labour precarity and (geo)political tension. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mahnaz Alimardanian , Timothy HeffernanPublisher: Manchester University Press Imprint: Manchester University Press Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.376kg ISBN: 9781526195777ISBN 10: 1526195771 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 20 January 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsIntroduction - Timothy Heffernan and Mahnaz Alimardanian Part I: Theorising ambiguity 1 Ontology and its double: on the nature of ambiguity and lived experience – Mahnaz Alimardanian 2 Ambiguity and catastrophe: crises of understanding in the age of COVID-19 – David J. Rosner 3 Ambiguity and politics: the suppression of complexity in Australian governmental responses to climate change – Jonathan P. Marshall Part II: Navigating temporal disruption 4 Queering the crisis–recovery nexus: personhood and societal transformation after economic collapse in Iceland – Timothy Heffernan 5 Accommodating care through strategic ignorance: the ambiguities of kidney disease amongst Yol?u renal patients in Australia’s Northern Territory – Stefanie Puszka 6 Charting fields of uncertainty: disaster, displacement and resilience in Bangladeshi char villages – Mohammad Altaf Hossain Part III: Imaging an ‘otherwise’ 7 Ambiguity in Belgrade’s bike activism: marginalised activists, powerful agents of change - Sabrina Steindl-Kopf 8 Adding (ambiguous) value: interfacing between alternative economics and entrepreneurial innovation in Ecuador – Alexander Emile D'Aloia 9 The sovereign’s road: checkpoints and the ambiguity of exception during Aotearoa’s lockdown – Joe Clifford 10 Grease Yaka in Sri Lankan political culture: humour, anxiety and existential ambiguities in public sphere – Anton Piyarathne Part IV: Self-realisation and disjuncture 11 Liminal ambiguity: the tricky position of being Black in white skin – Suzi Hutchings 12 The ambiguous path of self-cultivation in contemporary China – Gil Hizi 13 Ontological ambiguity: crisis, hyperfiction and social narratives in postmodern Japan – Angélica Cabrera Torrecilla Afterword: sitting and being with ambiguity - Mahnaz Alimardanian and Timothy Heffernan Index -- .Reviews“In unsettling times such as these, The Anthropology of ambiguity provides a critical resource for thinking through the ambient flux of ambiguous experiences that increasingly constitute our contemporary condition. Ambitious theoretically and attuned to the intricacies of lived experience, the volume significantly contributes to anthropological efforts to understand our complexly situated worldly existence as humans.” C. Jason Throop, Professor & Chair, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles ""Narrated through captivating ethnography and thought-provoking analyses, this volume brilliantly showcases nuanced ways in which reading ambiguity can help us understand the crises of our times."" Yasmine Musharbash, Associate Professor, Australian National University 'Grounded in ethnographic rigor, the contributors collectively emphasize the productive potential of ambiguity, challenging its conventional framing as a mere obstacle to clarity. Instead, ambiguity is celebrated as a dynamic force that underpins knowledge production, societal negotiation, and meaning-making across cultural contexts.' Intan Rosita et al., Reviews in Anthropology -- . Author InformationMahnaz Alimardanian is Research Fellow at The Mabo Centre, Faculty of Business and Economics, The University of Melbourne, and the founder and lead researcher at PiiR Consulting Timothy Heffernan is Lecturer in Anthropology at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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