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Community, with Kirsteen Paton

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Content provided by The Sociological Review. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Sociological Review or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

What’s meant – and who’s excluded – when community is invoked? Does membership take more than presence alone? How can seeing local crises through a global lens enrich our understanding? Kirsteen Paton joins Uncommon Sense to discuss community, class, resistance, solidarity and more – including her experience of community in the UK cities of Liverpool and Glasgow.
As the author of “Class and Everyday Life”, Kirsteen gives hosts Alexis and Rosie a fascinating potted history of the study of “community” in sociology – moving from the early work of Emile Durkheim and Ferdinand Tönnies, concerned with industrial capitalism, to recent studies of gentrification and the rise of identities beyond those tied to concrete ideas of “place”. They ask: how is sociology developing its thinking about online communities? And if there’s a tendency to idealise and romanticise “community” as typically positive, how should we think about and conceptualise those on the far right?
Also: does talking about place-based communities risk missing the fact that communities are also connected across borders and histories, including colonialism? Kirsteen reflects – via Ambalavaner Sivanandan and Doreen Massey – on how what appears to be “local” (whether crises like the housing one or cases of resistance) is often inextricably linked to the global. Plus: a celebration of Antonio Gramsci, Stuart Hall and more.
Guest: Kirsteen Paton
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense
Episode Resources
By Kirsteen Paton

From the Sociological Review Foundation

Further reading

  • “Coal is Our Life” – N. Dennis, F. Henriques, C. Slaughter
  • “Family and Kinship in East London” – M. Young, P. Willmott
  • “St Ann's” – K. Coates, R. Silburn
  • “Neither ‘Deepest, Darkest Peckham’ nor ‘Run-of-the-Mill’ East Dulwich: The Middle Classes and their ‘Others’ in an Inner-London Neighbourhood” – E. Jackson, M. Benson
  • “‘I Probably Would Never Move, but Ideally Like I’d Love to Move This Week’: Class and Residential Experience, Beyond Elective Belonging” – B. Jeffery
  • “Communities of Resistance: Writings on Black Struggles for Socialism” – A. Sivanandan
  • “A Global Sense of Place” – D. Massey
  • “New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s” – eds. S. Hall, M. Jacques
  • “All That Melts into Air is Solid: The Hokum of New Times” – A. Sivanandan

Support Uncommon Sense
Uncommon Sense is a project of the Sociological Review Foundation, a charity whose mission is to promote sociological thinking to audiences beyond academia.
There is a long and heartening tradition of listener support for independent podcasts. If you enjoy what you’ve heard and learned from Uncommon Sense, we’d be grateful for your support for the creation of future episodes.
Make a one-off or regular donation

  continue reading

29 episoade

Artwork
iconDistribuie
 
Manage episode 429654678 series 3334981
Content provided by The Sociological Review. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Sociological Review or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

What’s meant – and who’s excluded – when community is invoked? Does membership take more than presence alone? How can seeing local crises through a global lens enrich our understanding? Kirsteen Paton joins Uncommon Sense to discuss community, class, resistance, solidarity and more – including her experience of community in the UK cities of Liverpool and Glasgow.
As the author of “Class and Everyday Life”, Kirsteen gives hosts Alexis and Rosie a fascinating potted history of the study of “community” in sociology – moving from the early work of Emile Durkheim and Ferdinand Tönnies, concerned with industrial capitalism, to recent studies of gentrification and the rise of identities beyond those tied to concrete ideas of “place”. They ask: how is sociology developing its thinking about online communities? And if there’s a tendency to idealise and romanticise “community” as typically positive, how should we think about and conceptualise those on the far right?
Also: does talking about place-based communities risk missing the fact that communities are also connected across borders and histories, including colonialism? Kirsteen reflects – via Ambalavaner Sivanandan and Doreen Massey – on how what appears to be “local” (whether crises like the housing one or cases of resistance) is often inextricably linked to the global. Plus: a celebration of Antonio Gramsci, Stuart Hall and more.
Guest: Kirsteen Paton
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense
Episode Resources
By Kirsteen Paton

From the Sociological Review Foundation

Further reading

  • “Coal is Our Life” – N. Dennis, F. Henriques, C. Slaughter
  • “Family and Kinship in East London” – M. Young, P. Willmott
  • “St Ann's” – K. Coates, R. Silburn
  • “Neither ‘Deepest, Darkest Peckham’ nor ‘Run-of-the-Mill’ East Dulwich: The Middle Classes and their ‘Others’ in an Inner-London Neighbourhood” – E. Jackson, M. Benson
  • “‘I Probably Would Never Move, but Ideally Like I’d Love to Move This Week’: Class and Residential Experience, Beyond Elective Belonging” – B. Jeffery
  • “Communities of Resistance: Writings on Black Struggles for Socialism” – A. Sivanandan
  • “A Global Sense of Place” – D. Massey
  • “New Times: The Changing Face of Politics in the 1990s” – eds. S. Hall, M. Jacques
  • “All That Melts into Air is Solid: The Hokum of New Times” – A. Sivanandan

Support Uncommon Sense
Uncommon Sense is a project of the Sociological Review Foundation, a charity whose mission is to promote sociological thinking to audiences beyond academia.
There is a long and heartening tradition of listener support for independent podcasts. If you enjoy what you’ve heard and learned from Uncommon Sense, we’d be grateful for your support for the creation of future episodes.
Make a one-off or regular donation

  continue reading

29 episoade

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