Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity. / Emmeche, Claus.

Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities. ed. / Claus Emmeche; David Budtz Pedersen; Frederik Stjernfelt. Bloomsbury Academic, 2016. p. 77-96.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Emmeche, C 2016, Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity. in C Emmeche, DB Pedersen & F Stjernfelt (eds), Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities. Bloomsbury Academic, pp. 77-96.

APA

Emmeche, C. (2016). Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity. In C. Emmeche, D. B. Pedersen, & F. Stjernfelt (Eds.), Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities (pp. 77-96). Bloomsbury Academic.

Vancouver

Emmeche C. Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity. In Emmeche C, Pedersen DB, Stjernfelt F, editors, Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities. Bloomsbury Academic. 2016. p. 77-96

Author

Emmeche, Claus. / Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity. Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities. editor / Claus Emmeche ; David Budtz Pedersen ; Frederik Stjernfelt. Bloomsbury Academic, 2016. pp. 77-96

Bibtex

@inbook{2bf766c8e0bd4e71b0acdf7e8f0884b8,
title = "Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity",
abstract = "Calls for interdisciplinarity in the humanities often presume the existence of disciplines as separate academic fields, with research collaboration framed as a crossing of the borders between separate areas of knowledge. By way of two case studies and a comparative approach called borderology, the chapter questions such a notion and investigates other aspects of interdisciplinary work as practiced by researchers in the humanities and the social sciences. First, the rich work on modern love by sociologist Eva Illouz, illustrating a form of intrinsic interdisciplinarity, is analyzed. Second, recent work within friendship studies is compared, and borderology is used to shed light upon friendship both as a real phenomenon and as a cluster of concepts invoked and investigated by different disciplines. These examples may help policy makers appreciate one of the ways in which the humanities are always already interdisciplinary.",
keywords = "Det Humanistiske Fakultet, borderology, interdisciplinarity, interconnectedness, humanities, friendship, love",
author = "Claus Emmeche",
note = "https://www.academia.edu/30941837/Friendship_love_and_the_borderology_of_interdisciplinarity",
year = "2016",
month = dec,
day = "1",
language = "Dansk",
isbn = "978-1-4725-9768-7",
pages = "77--96",
editor = "Claus Emmeche and Pedersen, {David Budtz} and Frederik Stjernfelt",
booktitle = "Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities",
publisher = "Bloomsbury Academic",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Friendship, Love and the Borderology of interdisciplinarity

AU - Emmeche, Claus

N1 - https://www.academia.edu/30941837/Friendship_love_and_the_borderology_of_interdisciplinarity

PY - 2016/12/1

Y1 - 2016/12/1

N2 - Calls for interdisciplinarity in the humanities often presume the existence of disciplines as separate academic fields, with research collaboration framed as a crossing of the borders between separate areas of knowledge. By way of two case studies and a comparative approach called borderology, the chapter questions such a notion and investigates other aspects of interdisciplinary work as practiced by researchers in the humanities and the social sciences. First, the rich work on modern love by sociologist Eva Illouz, illustrating a form of intrinsic interdisciplinarity, is analyzed. Second, recent work within friendship studies is compared, and borderology is used to shed light upon friendship both as a real phenomenon and as a cluster of concepts invoked and investigated by different disciplines. These examples may help policy makers appreciate one of the ways in which the humanities are always already interdisciplinary.

AB - Calls for interdisciplinarity in the humanities often presume the existence of disciplines as separate academic fields, with research collaboration framed as a crossing of the borders between separate areas of knowledge. By way of two case studies and a comparative approach called borderology, the chapter questions such a notion and investigates other aspects of interdisciplinary work as practiced by researchers in the humanities and the social sciences. First, the rich work on modern love by sociologist Eva Illouz, illustrating a form of intrinsic interdisciplinarity, is analyzed. Second, recent work within friendship studies is compared, and borderology is used to shed light upon friendship both as a real phenomenon and as a cluster of concepts invoked and investigated by different disciplines. These examples may help policy makers appreciate one of the ways in which the humanities are always already interdisciplinary.

KW - Det Humanistiske Fakultet

KW - borderology

KW - interdisciplinarity

KW - interconnectedness

KW - humanities

KW - friendship

KW - love

UR - http://www.bloomsbury.com/uk/mapping-frontier-research-in-the-humanities-9781472597687/

M3 - Bidrag til bog/antologi

SN - 978-1-4725-9768-7

SP - 77

EP - 96

BT - Mapping Frontier research in the Humanities

A2 - Emmeche, Claus

A2 - Pedersen, David Budtz

A2 - Stjernfelt, Frederik

PB - Bloomsbury Academic

ER -

ID: 168924946