Notes
1 Bruno Latour, Reassembling the Social: An Introduction to Actor-Network-Theory (Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press 2005).
2 Greg Noble and Scott Poynting, ‘Neither relaxed nor comfortable: the affective regulation of migrant belonging in Australia’, in Rachel Pain and Susan J. Smith (eds), Fear: Critical Geopolitics and Everyday Life (Aldershot, Hants and Burlington, VT: Ashgate 2008), 129–38.
3 Iain Wilkinson, Anxiety in a Risk Society: Health, Risk and Society (London and New York: Routledge 2001); Frank Furedi, Culture of Fear: Risk-taking and the Morality of Low Expectation (London: Cassell 1997).
4 Scott Poynting, Greg Noble, Paul Tabar and Jock Collins, Bin Laden in the Suburbs: Criminalising the Arab Other (Sydney: Institute of Criminology 2004).
5 Ghassan Hage, Against Paranoid Nationalism: Seaching for Hope in a Shrinking Society (Melbourne: Pluto Press 2003).
6 Megan Watkins, Greg Noble and Catherine Driscoll, ‘Pedagogy: the unsaid of socio-cultural theory’, in Megan Watkins, Greg Noble and Catherine Driscoll (eds), Cultural Pedagogies and Human Conduct (London and New York: Routledge 2015), 1–16.
7 Ash Amin, Land of Strangers (Cambridge and Malden, MA: Polity Press 2012).
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Greg Noble
Greg Noble is Professor at the Institute for Society and Culture at Western Sydney University in Australia. His areas of research are everyday multiculturalism, cultural pedagogies and habit, the cultural analysis of education, Bourdieusian theory and youth, ethnicity and gender. His latest book (co-edited with Megan Walker and Catherine Driscoll) is Cultural Pedagogies and Human Conduct (Routledge 2015).