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9781538150726 Add to Cart Academic Inspection Copy

Affective Assemblages and Local Economies

  • ISBN-13: 9781538150726
  • Publisher: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
    Imprint: ROWMAN & LITTLEFIELD PUBLISHERS
  • By Joanie Willett
  • Price: AUD $70.99
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: Book will be despatched upon release.
  • Local release date: 22/08/2023
  • Format: Paperback (227.00mm X 161.00mm) 178 pages Weight: 0g
  • Categories: Political economy [KCP]
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What becomes visible if we look at peripheral, deprived rural regions through the lens of a complex adaptive assemblage? Affective Assemblages and Local Economies uses ethnographic research and qualitative interviews with members of the public and some policy makers to examine this question. Over a year-long project in Cornwall in the South West of the UK, and the South West of Virginia, USA, the book considers what becomes visible if we understand the region through the words of ordinary people, rather than planners and policy-makers. Drawing on the Deleuzian affective assemblage, it builds the concept of the Region-Assemblage to examine the deep interconnectedness between people, objects, organisations and the processes that we find in the regions that we observe.
Joanie Willett is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Exeter.
Chapter 1. Why the Need for the Complex Adaptive Region Assemblage? Chapter 2. The Affective Assemblage Chapter 3. The Evolutionary Regional Assemblage, Becoming and Economies Chapter 4. South West Virginia and Cornwall: Constructing the Complex Adaptive Regional-Assemblage Chapter 5. South West Virginia Chapter 6. Cornwall Chapter 7. What Do We See? Spaces of Possibility in Southwest Virginia and Cornwall Chapter 8. Conclusion References
This is an excellent book, theoretically sound and featuring fascinating case studies. Willett looks comparatively at two regions across the UK and the USA, to construct a rural development model and critique existing approaches within a wider political context. -- Menelaos Gkartzios, Newcastle University There is much to unpack here, and it is deftly done across the first three chapters. Willett is adept at translating often nebulous ideas for a wider regional studies audience, whether neatly parsing affect theory (a minor academic industry itself) or introducing Bergsonian temporality (without tears). Such conceptual clarity should earn the book space on many different shelves. Readers mystified by mention of assemblage and affect, or coming to the concepts for the first time, will find explanations made the more digestible through helpful analogy. Equally, readers already in the theoretical know will find plenty to reflect on, extend and remix. * Regional Studies *
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