The Future of Political Anthropology
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Narrado por:
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Matthew R. Weeks
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De:
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Boris Kriger
From tribal rituals to televised inaugurations, from thrones to algorithms, politics has survived not through brute force but through spectacle, myth, and symbols. Georges Balandier called it the theater of power. This audiobook asks what happens when that theater moves to screens, platforms, and code.
Here, masks become memes, oracles become algorithms, and utopias battle apocalypses in real time. Global crises become stages, hashtags become totems, and the sacred reappears—digitized, quantified, and disguised as objectivity. Power no longer wears crowns; it wears interfaces. It doesn’t command; it calculates.
The Future of Political Anthropology takes Balandier’s vision into the 21st century. It explores how authority is legitimated through images, rituals, data, and digital networks—and why ethics, doubt, and vulnerability are the last defenses against silent forms of domination.
This is not an audiobook of nostalgia for old theories, nor a museum of political anthropology. It is a manifesto for seeing power where it hides today—in algorithms, memes, crises, and statistics—and for resisting its seductions.
Because the theater of power has no last act. And the question is no longer whether you are in the audience, but whether you realize you’re already on stage.