834
Views
1
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Contested Multiplicities and Mobile Monologues: The Poetics and Politics of Conviviality in the Plural

References

  • Ahmed, S., 2004. Collective Feelings: Or, the Impression Left by Others. Theory, Culture and Society, 21 (2), 25–42.
  • Ahmed, S., 2007. A Phenomenology of Whiteness. Feminist Theory, 8 (2), 149–168.
  • Back, L., 1996. New Ethnicities and Urban Culture. Racisms and Multiculture in Young Lives. London: UCL Press Limited.
  • Baumann, G., 1996. Contesting Culture. Discourses of Identity in Multi-Ethnic London. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Beyen, M., 2015. Greetings from Borgerokko. An Antwerp Neighborhood as a National Icon of Globalization and Anti-Globalism. In: M. Beyen and B. Deseure, eds. Local Memories in a Nationalizing and Globalizing World. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 244–257.
  • Blokland, T., and Nast, J., 2014. From Public Familiarity to Comfort Zone: The Relevance of Absent Ties for Belonging in Berlin’s Mixed Neighbourhoods. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 38 (4), 1142–1159.
  • Braidotti, R., 2014. Writing as a Nomadic Subject. Comparative Critical Studies, 11 (2-3), 163–184.
  • Chabal, E., 2015. A Divided Republic. Nation, State, and Citizenship in Contemporary France. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Clayton, J., 2009. Thinking Spatially: Towards an Everyday Understanding of Inter-Ethnic Relations. Social & Cultural Geography, 10 (4), 481–498.
  • Clifford, J., and Marcus, G., 1986. Writing Culture. The Poetics and Politics of Ethnography. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • de Koning, A., and Vollebergh, A., 2019. Ordinary Icons: Public Discourses and Everyday Lives in an Anxious Europe. American Anthropologist, 121 (2), 390–402.
  • Fassin, D., 2009. Moral Economies Revisited. Annales. Histoire. Sciences Sociales, 64 (6), 1237–1266.
  • Fortier, A., 2007. Too Close for Comfort: Loving thy Neighbour and the Management of Multicultural Intimacies. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 25 (1), 104–119.
  • Fortier, A., 2010. Proximity by Design? Affective Citizenship and the Management of Unease. Citizenship Studies, 14 (1), 17–30.
  • Gilroy, P., 2005. Postcolonial Melancholia. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Haylett, C., 2001. Illegitimate Subjects?: Abject Whites, Neoliberal Modernisation, and Middle-Class Multiculturalism. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 19 (3), 351–370.
  • Jean, S., 2017. L’expérience de la diversité dans les quartiers de classe moyenne à Montréal: entre inconforts et rapprochements. Anthropologie et Sociétés, 41 (3), 213–231.
  • Karner, C., and Parker, P., 2011. Conviviality and Conflict: Pluralism, Resilience and Hope in Inner-City Birmingham. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 37 (3), 355–372.
  • Kusenbach, M., 2003. Street Phenomenology: The Go-Along as Ethnographic Research Tool. Ethnography, 4 (3), 455–485.
  • Kusserow, A., 2017. Anthropoetry. In: A. Pandian and S. McLean, eds. Crumpled Paper Boat. Experiments in Ethnographic Writing. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 71–90.
  • Leloup, X., Germain, A., and Radice, M., 2016. “Ici, c’est polyethnique”: les cadrages de la diversité ethnique dans quatre quartiers de classes moyennes à Montréal. Lien social et Politiques, 77, 200–219.
  • Loopmans, M., 2006. From Residents to Neighbors. The Making of Active Citizens in Antwerp, Belgium. In: J. Duyvendak, T. Knijn, and M. Kremer, eds. Policy, People and the New Professional. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 109–121.
  • M’Charek, A., 2013. Beyond Fact or Fiction: On the Materiality of Race in Practice. Cultural Anthropology, 28 (3), 420–442.
  • Mepschen, P., 2016. The Culturalization of Everyday Life: Autochthony in Amsterdam New West. In: J. Duyvendak, P. Geschiere, and E. Tonkens, eds. The Culturalization of Citizenship. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 73–96.
  • Mol, A., 2002. The Body Multiple. Ontology in Medical Practice. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
  • Nayak, A., 2017. Purging the Nation: Race, Conviviality and Embodied Encounters in the Lives of British Bangladeshi Muslim Young Women. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 42 (2), 289–302.
  • Neal, S., et al., 2013. Living Multiculture: Understanding the New Spatial and Social Relations of Ethnicity and Multiculture in England. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 31 (2), 389–400.
  • Noble, G., 2013. Cosmopolitan Habits: The Capacities and Habitats of Intercultural Conviviality. Body & Society, 19 (2–3), 162–185.
  • Nowicka, M., 2020. Fantasy of Conviviality: Banalities of Multicultural Settings and What We Do (Not) Notice When We Look at Them. In: O. Hemer, P. Frykman, and M. Per-Markku, eds. Conviviality at the Crossroads. The Poetics and Politics of Everyday Encounters. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 15–42.
  • Nowicka, M., and Vertovec, S., 2014. Comparing Convivialities: Dreams and Realities of Living-with-Difference. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 17 (4), 341–356.
  • Pandian, A., and McLean, S., 2017. Crumpled Paper Boat. Experiments in Ethnographic Writing. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
  • Phillips, D., 2006. Parallel Lives? Challenging Discourses of British Muslim Self-Segregation. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 24 (1), 25–40.
  • Pinkster, F., Ferier, M., and Hoekstra, M., 2020. On the Stickiness of Territorial Stigma: Diverging Experiences in Amsterdam’s Most Notorious Neighbourhood. Antipode, 52 (2), 522–541.
  • Scott, J., 1985. Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Shoshan, N., 2008. Placing the Extremes. Cityscapes, Ethnic ‘Others’ and Young Right Extremists in East-Berlin. Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 16 (3), 377–391.
  • Shoshan, N., 2016. The Management of Hate: Nation, Affect, and the Governance of Right-Wing Extremism in Germany. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Spinney, J., 2015. Close Encounters? Mobile Methods, (Post)Phenomenology and Affect. Cultural Geographies, 22 (2), 231–246.
  • Stevenson, L., 2017. A Proper Message. In: A. Pandian and S. McLean, eds. Crumpled Paper Boat. Experiments in Ethnographic Writing. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 209–221.
  • Stoller, P., 2016. Writing for the Future. In: H. Wulff, ed. The Anthropologist as Writer. Genres and Contexts in the Twenty-First Century. New York and London: Berghahn, 118–128.
  • Stone, N., 2020. Poetry and Anthropology. In: C. McGranahan, ed. Writing Anthropology. Essays on Craft and Commitment. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 195–200.
  • Tyler, S., 1986. Postmodern Ethnography: From Document of the Occult to Occult Document. In: J. Clifford and G. Marcus, eds. Writing Culture. The Poetics and Politics of Ethnography. Berkeley: University of California Press, 122–140.
  • Tyler, K., 2017. The Suburban Paradox of Conviviality and Racism in Postcolonial Britain. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 43 (11), 1890–1906.
  • Uitermark, J., 2003. De sociale controle van achterstandswijken. Een beleidsgenetisch perspectief. Amsterdam: KNAG.
  • Valentine, G., 2008. Living with Difference: Reflections on Geographies of Encounter. Progress in Human Geography, 32 (3), 323–337.
  • Valluvan, S., 2016. Conviviality and Multiculture: A Post-Integration Sociology of Multi-Ethnic Interaction. YOUNG, 24 (3), 204–221.
  • Vanden Daelen, V., 2011. Markers of a Minority Group: Jews in Antwerp in the Twentieth Century. In: J. Frishman, D. Wertheim, I. de Haan, and J. Cahen, eds. Borders and Boundaries in and Around Dutch Jewish History. Amsterdam: Aksant, 45–63.
  • van Eijk, G., 2012. Good Neighbours in Bad Neighbourhoods: Narratives of Dissociation and Practices of Neighbouring in a ‘Problem’ Place. Urban Studies, 49 (14), 3009–3026.
  • Vollebergh, A., 2016a. The Other Neighbour Paradox: Fantasies and Frustrations of ‘Living Together’ in Antwerp. Patterns of Prejudice, 50 (2), 129–149.
  • Vollebergh, A., 2016b. Strange Neighbors. Politics of ‘Living Together’ in Antwerp. PhD thesis, University of Amsterdam.
  • Vollebergh, A., 2020. The Everyday, ‘Ordinary’ Citizens, and Ambiguous Governance Affect in Antwerp. In: K. McKowen and J. Borneman, eds. Digesting Difference: Migrant Incorporation and Mutual Belonging in Europe. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 103–127.
  • Wekker, F., 2019. ‘We Have to Teach Them Diversity’: On Demographic Transformations and Lived Reality in an Amsterdam Working-Class Neighbourhood. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 42 (1), 89–104.
  • Wessendorf, S., 2013. Commonplace Diversity and the ‘Ethos of Mixing’: Perceptions of Difference in a London Neighbourhood. Identities, 20 (4), 407–422.
  • Wise, A., 2005. Hope and Belonging in a Multicultural Suburb. Journal of Intercultural Studies, 26 (1-2), 171–186.
  • Wise, A., 2010. Sensuous Multiculturalism: Emotional Landscapes of Inter- Ethnic Living in Australian Suburbia. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 36 (6), 917–937.
  • Wise, A., 2013. Hope in a Land of Strangers. Identities, 20 (1), 37–45.
  • Wise, A., and Velayutham, S., 2009. Everyday Multiculturalism. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Wise, A., and Velayutham, S., 2014. Conviviality in Everyday Multiculturalism: Some Brief Comparisons Between Singapore and Sydney. European Journal of Cultural Studies, 17 (4), 406–430.
  • Wulff, H., 2016. The Anthropologist as Writer. Genres and Contexts in the Twenty-First Century. New York and London: Berghahn.