"From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces

I discuss how agents utilise rhetoric to alter their ties with other agents within social spaces from field research conducted in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, from June 2014 to July 2015. First, I flesh out the theoretical and methodological framework for the rest of the dissertation. The theore...

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Main Author: Diming, Christopher John
Published: Durham University 2016
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721007
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7210072019-01-29T03:20:30Z"From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spacesDiming, Christopher John2016I discuss how agents utilise rhetoric to alter their ties with other agents within social spaces from field research conducted in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, from June 2014 to July 2015. First, I flesh out the theoretical and methodological framework for the rest of the dissertation. The theoretical framework is based on a view of hegemony influenced by Green and Laclau, where hegemony is a process through which agents draw on rhetoric to alter their relationships. I appropriate a methodology combining ethnography with systematic Social Network Analysis (SNA) and cultural domain analysis in order to provide a complementary account of networks, agents and spaces in Pristina. Second, I review the anthropological work on rhetoric, considering rhetoric as a tool used by agents to alter their social relations which draws on discourses. Third, I explore how agents in Pristina conceptualise space through interpreting perspectives from ethnographic interviews and data from a pile sort exercise, showing that spaces shape how agents act through being discursive settings. Fourth, I delve into the concepts of nder (“honour”) and turp (“shame”) through interviews and the analysis of a free list, showing how the concepts play out in Pristina and their links with each other, including related concepts. Fifth, I explore, through a SNA, how agents organise networks of relationships and illustrate how agents make use of rhetoric drawing on cultural concepts such as nder and besa in the course of their activities. Sixth, I explore how people in Pristina conceptualise their identities and show that Albanian national identity has been constructed as a discursive formation linking agents together. I conclude that agents utilise rhetoric to alter their ties with other agents in social spaces by drawing on discourses, thereby shaping discourses, changing the agents' networks and resulting in the emergence of new circumstances.949.7103Durham Universityhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721007http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/12251/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 949.7103
spellingShingle 949.7103
Diming, Christopher John
"From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
description I discuss how agents utilise rhetoric to alter their ties with other agents within social spaces from field research conducted in Pristina, the capital of Kosovo, from June 2014 to July 2015. First, I flesh out the theoretical and methodological framework for the rest of the dissertation. The theoretical framework is based on a view of hegemony influenced by Green and Laclau, where hegemony is a process through which agents draw on rhetoric to alter their relationships. I appropriate a methodology combining ethnography with systematic Social Network Analysis (SNA) and cultural domain analysis in order to provide a complementary account of networks, agents and spaces in Pristina. Second, I review the anthropological work on rhetoric, considering rhetoric as a tool used by agents to alter their social relations which draws on discourses. Third, I explore how agents in Pristina conceptualise space through interpreting perspectives from ethnographic interviews and data from a pile sort exercise, showing that spaces shape how agents act through being discursive settings. Fourth, I delve into the concepts of nder (“honour”) and turp (“shame”) through interviews and the analysis of a free list, showing how the concepts play out in Pristina and their links with each other, including related concepts. Fifth, I explore, through a SNA, how agents organise networks of relationships and illustrate how agents make use of rhetoric drawing on cultural concepts such as nder and besa in the course of their activities. Sixth, I explore how people in Pristina conceptualise their identities and show that Albanian national identity has been constructed as a discursive formation linking agents together. I conclude that agents utilise rhetoric to alter their ties with other agents in social spaces by drawing on discourses, thereby shaping discourses, changing the agents' networks and resulting in the emergence of new circumstances.
author Diming, Christopher John
author_facet Diming, Christopher John
author_sort Diming, Christopher John
title "From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
title_short "From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
title_full "From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
title_fullStr "From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
title_full_unstemmed "From the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in Pristina's public spaces
title_sort "from the café we went to war" : political manoeuvring and protest in pristina's public spaces
publisher Durham University
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.721007
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