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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Emma CrewePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.400kg ISBN: 9781474234573ISBN 10: 1474234577 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 23 April 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction1. Joining the House2. Allies and Adversaries3. Constituents' Champions4. Rulers and Whips5. Scrutiny and Making Trouble6. In the Shadow of the Law7. Reading the RunesBibliographyIndexReviewsEvery tribe needs its anthropologist and those currently sitting on the green benches in the Houses of Parliament have found theirs in Emma Crewe. She has a keen ear, a flair for divining character and for capturing episodes; and she marries the three in this fascinating study. -- Peter Hennessy, Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London, UK This anthropological tin-opener lifts the lid on Parliament and asks what drives people ... to so desperately want to be an MP ... [Crewe] is absolutely on the button in her vivid descriptions. Times Higher Education Every tribe needs its anthropologist and those currently sitting on the green benches in the Houses of Parliament have found theirs in Emma Crewe. She has a keen ear, a flair for divining character and for capturing episodes; and she marries the three in this fascinating study. -- Peter Hennessy, Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London, UK Politicians, and MPs in particular, are usually regarded as a weird breed set apart from normal people. So it is perhaps not surprising that an anthropologist was interested in studying how we behaved, interacted with others and coped with the pressures of our job. MPs are scrutinised and criticised more than ever, so it is refreshing to find research which has studied the actual work MPs do, not based on preconceptions and prejudice but on the reality of our daily lives. -- Dame Anne Begg, MP for Aberdeen South and Chair of the Work and Pensions Select Comittee Emma Crewes offers a rare ethnographic perspective on what life is actually like for the members of the House of Commons and how the MPs view their jobs. Written in a lively style, and benefiting from unusual access to behind-the-scenes, rarely glimpsed settings, The House of Commons will lead readers to rethink what they thought they knew about this oft-disparaged institution. -- David Kertzer, Brown University, USA Emma Crewe has written a perceptive, balanced and thorough research project into modern day politics. She brings it to life by her anecdotes and quotations, which are then brought together to form the conclusions. Being followed around by an anthropologist was, at first, daunting - but better than being followed by a tabloid reporter! And the work is a more sympathetic and realistic analysis of our much-maligned profession. -- Rt Hon Sir George Young Bt CH, MP for North West Hampshire This anthropological tin-opener lifts the lid on Parliament and asks what drives people ... to so desperately want to be an MP ... [Crewe] is absolutely on the button in her vivid descriptions. Times Higher Education The House of Commons does what anthropology does best, namely, to depict how people actually behave rather than how documents and rules stipulate or predict how they will or should behave. It also shows the cultural and personal nature of supposedly formal and purely legal institutions ... sending an anthropologist in, especially one who achieves the access of Crewe in this instance, provides a view that few people ever get of their representatives in action-a view that ideally those representatives want us to have, so that we can more fully appreciate the pressures they are under and the work they actually accomplish. -- David Eller Anthropology Review Database Subtle ... [and] empathetic ... The book itself explores the creatures in the lower house with a mix of first-hand experience, interviews, anecdotes and a recollection of history. It still has the feel of a text book that would be handy for politics students ... but also, as an anthropology, it touches on several aspects of human behaviour that [are] prevalent in many competitive environments and workplaces. -- Mel Gomes TheSubstantive.com Every tribe needs its anthropologist and those currently sitting on the green benches in the Houses of Parliament have found theirs in Emma Crewe. She has a keen ear, a flair for divining character and for capturing episodes; and she marries the three in this fascinating study. -- Peter Hennessy, Professor of Contemporary British History, Queen Mary, University of London, UK Politicians, and MPs in particular, are usually regarded as a weird breed set apart from normal people. So it is perhaps not surprising that an anthropologist was interested in studying how we behaved, interacted with others and coped with the pressures of our job. MPs are scrutinised and criticised more than ever, so it is refreshing to find research which has studied the actual work MPs do, not based on preconceptions and prejudice but on the reality of our daily lives. -- Dame Anne Begg, MP for Aberdeen South and Chair of the Work and Pensions Select Comittee Emma Crewes offers a rare ethnographic perspective on what life is actually like for the members of the House of Commons and how the MPs view their jobs. Written in a lively style, and benefiting from unusual access to behind-the-scenes, rarely glimpsed settings, The House of Commons will lead readers to rethink what they thought they knew about this oft-disparaged institution. -- David Kertzer, Brown University, USA Emma Crewe has written a perceptive, balanced and thorough research project into modern day politics. She brings it to life by her anecdotes and quotations, which are then brought together to form the conclusions. Being followed around by an anthropologist was, at first, daunting - but better than being followed by a tabloid reporter! And the work is a more sympathetic and realistic analysis of our much-maligned profession. -- Rt Hon Sir George Young Bt CH, MP for North West Hampshire Author InformationEmma Crewe is a Research Associate at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at SOAS, University of London, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |