In contemporary Western societies, the visual domain has come to assume a thus far unprecedented cultural centrality. Daily life is replete with a potentially endless stream of images and other visual messages: from the electronic and paper-based billboards of the street, to the TV and Internet feeds of the home. The visual has become imbued with a symbolic potency, a signifying power that seemingly eclipses that of all other sensory data.

The central aim of this four-volume collection is to explore key approaches to visual research methods and to consider some of the core principles, issues, debates and controversies surrounding the use of visual techniques in relation to three key enterprises: 1) documentation and representation; 2) interpretation and classification and 3) elicitation and collaboration.

Volume 1: Principles, Issues, Debates and Controversies in Visual Research serves as a theoretical backdrop to the field as a whole. It introduces core epistemological, ethical and methodological debates that effectively cut across the four volume collection as a whole. Volume 2: Documentation and Representation illustrates approaches to visual documentation and representation, from classical documentaries to contemporary, state of the art modes of visual anthropology and ethnography. Volume 3: Interpretation and Classification examines core debates surrounding and approaches to visual analysis. Finally, Volume 4: Elicitation and Collaboration explores participative approaches to visual inquiry.

Comments on Elias's ‘Scenes from the Life of a Knight’

Comments on Elias's ‘scenes from the life of a knight’
Comments on Elias's “Scenes from the Life of a Knight”EricDunningSAGE Publications, Inc.
2455 Teller RoadThousand OaksCalifornia91320United States of America
June 198742366366371

Contact SAGE Publications at http://www.sagepub.com

Encoding from PDF of original work

Comments on Elias's “Scenes from the Life of a Knight”,EricDunningTheory, Culture & Society,4(1987):366–371.Published by SAGE Publications Ltd. Reprinted with permission.

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In one of his few published references to the work of Norbert Elias, Anthony Giddens (1984: 129) writes dismissively in The Constitution of Society that:

In spite of Elias's claims that sexual activity was carried on in an unconcealed way in medieval Europe, genital sexuality seems everywhere to be zoned as a back-region phenomenon, with many variations, of ...

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