Abstract
In this article I consider several emergent trends in anthropology since the 1980s against a backdrop of the rise of neoliberalism as both an economic and a governmental formation. I consider first the turn to what I call “dark anthropology,” that is, anthropology that focuses on the harsh dimensions of social life (power, domination, inequality, and oppression), as well as on the subjective experience of these dimensions in the form of depression and hopelessness. I then consider a range of work that is explicitly or implicitly a reaction to this dark turn, under the rubric of “anthropologies of the good,” including studies of “the good life” and “happiness,” as well as studies of morality and ethics.…
Citation impact
695
total citations
- FWCI
- 306.95
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 115
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Sociology
- Oppression
- Morality
- Applied anthropology
- Happiness
- Neoliberalism (international relations)
- Rubric
- Power (physics)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
No related works found for this paper.