ISBN:
1560987774
Language:
English
Pages:
XVIII, 186, [16] S.
,
Ill., Kt.
Series Statement:
Smithsonian series in ethnographic inquiry
DDC:
305.891/5
Keywords:
Bergers - Iran - Kermān (Ostān)
;
Classes sociales - Iran - Kermān (Ostān)
;
Conflits sociaux - Iran - Kermān (Ostān)
;
Culturele antropologie
;
Ethnologie - Iran - Kermān (Ostān) - Philosophie
;
Ethnologie - Iran - Kermān (Ostān) - Recherche sur le terrain
;
Komachi (Peuple d'Iran) - Conditions sociales
;
Komachi (Peuple d'Iran) - Conditions économiques
;
Nomaden
;
Veldwerk
;
Alltag, Brauchtum
;
Philosophie
;
Wirtschaft
;
Ethnology Fieldwork
;
Ethnology Philosophy
;
Komachi (Iranian people) Economic conditions
;
Komachi (Iranian people) Social conditions
;
Shepherds
;
Social classes
;
Social conflict
;
Soziale Situation
;
Ethnologie
;
Hirt
;
Kermān (Iran : Ostān) - Mœurs et coutumes
;
Kirmān (Iran : Province) Social life and customs
;
Iran
;
Kerman
;
Iran
;
Kerman
;
Hirt
;
Soziale Situation
;
Ethnologie
Abstract:
Drawing on the extraordinary and everyday events of his two years among the Komachi nomads of the southern Iran, Daniel Bradburd shows how direct interaction with another culture can provide the intense, forceful encounters essential to anthropological understanding. In Being There, lively accounts of his fieldwork illuminate not only the complexities of Komachi life but also toward comprehending a culture. Bradburd also explores the differences between anthropological and other kinds of experience by comparing his interpretations of Iranian culture with those of four nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century travelers in the region. The accounts of a young adventurer, a seasoned travel writer, a pre-World War I intelligence officer, and the wife of Britain's ambassador include observations that, when stripped of their Victorian trappings, often parallel Bradburd's own. Defining ethnography as the constant attempt to put specific events and encounters into a fuller context, Bradburd counters that field work virtually forces understanding on those who practice it. Exploring the role of the anthropologist as an interpreter of culture, he contends that the knowledge achieved through field experience holds the potential for bridging the world's increasing - and increasingly destructive - cultural divisions.
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