The Network Inside Out"Networks" and other artifacts of institutional life--documents, funding proposals, newsletters, organizational charts--are such ubiquitous aspects of the "information age" that they go unnoticed to most observers. In this work, Annelise Riles takes a sophisticated theoretical approach to examine the aesthetics of these artifacts and practices, to learn what their very forms and formats can tell us about knowledge and legality in today's world. The immediate subject of Riles's ethnographic work was a group of Fijian bureaucrats and activists preparing for and participating in the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women. Participants in this meeting and the activities surrounding it understood themselves to be "focal points" in national, regional, and global "networks." Starting from the premise that anthropologists are "inside" the Network, that is, that they are producers, consumers, and aesthetes, not simply observers, of the artifacts of late modern institutional life, Riles enacts a new ethnographic method for turning the network "inside out." The resulting experiment in the theory and ethnography of transnational institutional practices makes an important contribution to the anthropology of knowledge. With its focus on developing a method for studying transnational phenomena, The Network Inside Out will appeal not only to anthropologists, but also to legal scholars and political scientists. Annelise Riles is Assistant Professor, Northwestern University School of Law, Research Fellow, American Bar Foundation. |
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Contents
Inside Out | 1 |
Global Conferences | 8 |
Womens Conferences from a Pacific Perspective 197595 | 14 |
Sociality Seen Twice | 23 |
Some Institutions and Networks Mentioned in the Text | 34 |
Fiji Participants Affiliations at the Preparatory Conferences for | 41 |
Infinity within the Brackets | 70 |
Division within the Boundaries | 92 |
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Common terms and phrases
academic activist activities aesthetic agencies analysis analytical appeal artifact attention Beijing Conference brackets called chapter clan collection commitment concerning connections considered context culture delegates described Development diagram discussion division document donors drafting effect entities example exist fact figure Fiji Fijian focal points formal Forum funding gaps given global groups held human imagined included inside institutional interest involved Island issues Kasavu kind knowledge land language levels lines material Matrix mats matter means meeting negotiators newsletter noted objects organizations Pacific participants particular pattern Platform for Action political possibilities practices presented problem produced proposed question referred regional relations relationship representatives sense served share social South space Suva technical tion turn understand United Nations Whippy women YWCA