2013
DOI: 10.4135/9781452276311
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Theory in Social and Cultural Anthropology: An Encyclopedia

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Cited by 16 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Basically, the belief in primbon in the Javanese ethnic community sooner or later experiences a shift and change as a result of the growth and development of a culture that is called by the current generation a "super organic" culture which is the creation of the community itself and they become followers of the culture (McGee & Warms 2013). They are mostly hardly controlled, but humanistic reactions will quickly react to these changes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Basically, the belief in primbon in the Javanese ethnic community sooner or later experiences a shift and change as a result of the growth and development of a culture that is called by the current generation a "super organic" culture which is the creation of the community itself and they become followers of the culture (McGee & Warms 2013). They are mostly hardly controlled, but humanistic reactions will quickly react to these changes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…28 This realisation clearly seems to move in our direction by crossing the boundaries related to the activation of the AR devices. However, we cannot take it as an intersubjective object because it does not have the other elements of the mundane intersubjectivity such as it does not provide any "resistance" to the action of the subjects.…”
Section: The "Always" Element Of the Paramount Realitymentioning
confidence: 93%
“…27 http://www.lesliensinvisibles.org/2011/04/theinvisible-pink-unicorn-art-overtakes-faith-inimagination/ (Accessed 10 May 2015). 28 "the Invisible Unicorn is not a joke and it wont be removed it from its current position. The virtual sculpture is 'real, (in)visible and it has to be taken into serious consideration: it is the way a recontextualized symbol can alter, challenge and reshape the perception of a public spaceespecially a very closed and symbolic one like the [ 29 For example, a way to understand how such AR should be created as not helpful can be seen in the work by B. Brinkman [2].…”
Section: The "Resistance" Of the Objects Of The Paramount Realitymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…While scholars uncovered a discrepancy between the thick and relatively tolerant same-sex tradition in dynastic China (Hinsch, 1990; Zhang, 2001) and the homo-suppressive culture in the 20th century (Leung, 2010; Li, 2006), they often attribute China’s transition into sexual conservatism to Westernization that brought in heteronormativity during the 19th and 20th century when China’s door was forcefully opened by the West through invasion. Indeed, as sexuality became a defining trait of personal identity in the Western world during the 18th and 19th centuries (Foucault, 1976; McGee and Warms, 2011: 53), same-sex practices were increasingly homosexualized in Maoist China under such institutionalized regulating forces that had never happened before, considering: first, homosexuality was subject to ‘the arbitrary imposition of administrative penalties and Party disciplinary sanctions’ (Li, 2006), and second, a subjectivity beyond the system of heterosexual structures began to seek articulation in social discourses but could not be articulated, ‘turn[ing] into a ghost living nowhere’ (Zhang, 2011). It seems undeniable that Westernization prepared China for a more homo-suppressive culture through its export of concepts like heteronormativity, sexualized identity and homosexuality per se , though it is not until the Maoist period that these imported concepts found best alliance with and expression in the red revolutionary culture and socialist ideologies.…”
Section: ‘Queer Occidentalism’: Homo-capitalism Versus Hetero-socialismmentioning
confidence: 99%