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Full Description
The migration crisis of recent years has elicited a double response: on the one hand, many states have responded by tightening border controls, in an attempt to restrict population movements, while on the other hand many citizens have responded by welcoming new arrivals, offering them shelter, food and whatever help they could provide. By so doing, they have re-awakened an old form of anthropology that was long-considered to be dead - that of hospitality.
 In this book, Agier develops an original anthropology of hospitality that starts from the reality of hospitality as a social relationship, albeit an asymmetrical one, in which each party has rights and duties. He argues that, with the decline of state and religious support, hospitality is now making a comeback at individual and municipal levels but these local initiatives, while important, are insufficient to respond to the scale of migration in the world today. We need a new hospitality policy for the modern era, one that will regard hospitality as a right rather than a favour and will treat the stranger as a guest rather than as an alien or an enemy.
 This timely and original book will be of great interest to students and scholars in anthropology, sociology and the social sciences generally, and to anyone concerned with migration and refugees in the world today.
Contents
Acknowledgements
 
 Introduction. Hospitality when least expected
 
 Chapter 1. Making the stranger my guest
 The conditions of unconditionality 
 The elementary forms of hospitality
 From domestic hospitality to public hospitality
 
 Chapter 2. Hospitality - the challenge of the present
 Encounters of a new type
 Hospitality - causes and effects
 The emergence of municipal hospitality
 From ghetto to migrant houses
 Hospitable municipality versus hostile state
 
 Chapter 3. The need for cosmopolitics
 Cosmopolitanism today
 The principle of hospitality and cosmopolitics from a philosophical perspective
 Banal cosmopolitanism: an anthropological point of view
 
 Chapter 4. Becoming a stranger
 The death of Stavros or the birth of Joe Arness
 Three times a stranger
 The migrant poet and the spectre of the alien 
 
 Conclusion
 
 Postscript. The stranger post Covid-19
 Notes
 Index

              
              
              
              
              

