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  • FID-SKA-Lizenzen  (78)
  • General Anthropology  (78)
  • 1
    ISBN: 9781785332920
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 241 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Research Methods for Anthropological Studies of Food and Nutrition 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Nutritional Anthropology and public health research and programming have employed similar methodologies for decades; many anthropologists are public health practitioners while many public health practitioners have been trained as medical or biological anthropologists. Recognizing such professional connections, this volume provides in-depth analysis and comprehensive review of methods necessary to design, plan, implement and analyze public health programming using anthropological best practices. To illustrates the rationale for use of particular methods, each chapter elaborates a case study from the author's own work, showing why particular methods were adopted in each case.
    Description / Table of Contents: INTRODUCTION AND RESEARCH ETHICS -- Introduction -- Janet Chrzan -- Research Ethics in Food Studies -- Sharon Devine and John Brett -- PART I: PUBLIC HEALTH AND NUTRITION -- Chapter 1. Introduction to Public Health Nutrition Methods -- Ellen Messer -- Chapter 2. Identifying and using indicators to assess program effectiveness: Food intake, biomarkers, and nutritional evaluation -- Alyson Young and Meredith Marten -- Chapter 3. Ethnography as a Tool for Formative Research and Evaluation -- Gretel Pelto -- Chapter 4. Methods for Community Health Involvement -- David Himelgreen, Sara Arias Steele, and Nancy Romero-Daza -- Chapter 5. Understanding Famine and Severe Food Emergencies -- Miriam Chaiken -- Chapter 6. Food Activism: Researching Engagement, Engaging Research -- Joan Gross -- Chapter 7. Food Praxis as Method -- Penny Van Esterik -- PART II: TECHNOLOGY AND ANALYSIS -- Chapter 8. Using technology and measurement tools in nutritional anthropology of food studies -- John Brett -- Chapter 9. Mapping Food and Nutrition Landscapes: GIS Methods for Nutritional Anthropology -- Barry Brenton -- Chapter 10. Photo-Video Voice -- Helen Vallianatos -- Chapter 11. Digital Storytelling: Using First-Person Videos about Food in Research and Advocacy -- Marty Otanez -- Chapter 12. Accessing and Using Secondary Quantitative Data from the Internet -- James Wilson and Kristen Borre -- Chapter 13. Using Secondary Data in Nutritional Anthropology Research: Enhancing Ethnographic and Formative Research -- Kristen Borre and James Wilson -- Chapter 14. Designing food insecurity scales from the ground up: An introduction and working example of building and testing food insecurity scales in anthropological research -- Craig Hadley and Lesley Jo Weaver --
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9781785332906
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 275 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Research Methods for Anthropological Studies of Food and Nutrition 2
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: This volume offers a comprehensive guide to methods used in the sociocultural, linguistic and historical research of food use. This volume is unique in offering food-related research methods from multiple academic disciplines, and includes methods that bridge disciplines to provide a thorough review of best practices. In each chapter, a case study from the author's own work is to illustrate why the methods were adopted in that particular case along with abundant additional resources to further develop and explore the methods.
    Description / Table of Contents: INTRODUCTION AND RESEARCH ETHICS -- Introduction and Research Design -- Janet Chrzan -- Research Ethics in Food Studies -- Sharon Devine and John Brett -- PART I: SOCIO-CULTURAL APPROACHES -- Chapter 1. The Anthropology of Food and Food Anthropology: A Sociocultural Perspective -- Geraldine Moreno Black -- Chapter 2. Interviewing Epistemologies: From Life History to Kitchen Table Ethnography -- Ramona Lee Perez -- Chapter 3. Body Image -- Mimi Nichter and Nichole Taylor -- Chapter 4. Visual Anthropology Methods -- Helen Vallianatos -- Chapter 5. On the Lookout: The Use of Direct Observation in Nutritional Anthropology -- Barbara Piperata and Darna Dufour -- Chapter 6. Participant-observation and Interviewing Techniques -- Heather Paxson -- Chapter 7. Focus Groups in Qualitative or Mixed Methods Research -- Ramona L. Perez -- Chapter 8. Studying Food and Culture: Ethnographic Methods in the Classroom -- Carole Counihan -- PART II: LINGUISTICS AND FOOD TALK -- Chapter 9. Introduction to Linguistic Anthropology Food Research Methods -- Jillian Cavanaugh and Kate Riley -- Chapter 10. Food Talk: Studying Food and Language in Use Together -- Jillian Cavanaugh and Kate Riley -- Chapter 11. An Introduction to Cultural Domain Analysis in Food Research: Free Lists and Pile Sorts -- Ariela Zycherman -- Chapter 12. Food and Text(ual) Analysis -- Kate Riley -- Chapter 13. Analysis of Primary Historic Sources -- Ken Albala -- PART III: FOOD STUDIES -- Chapter 14. Introduction to Food Studies Methods -- Amy Trubek -- Chapter 15. Meaning Centered Food Research -- Lucy Long -- Chapter 16. Food and Place -- William Woys Weaver -- Chapter 17. Sensory Ethnography: methods and research design for Food Studies research -- Rachel Black -- Chapter 18. Methods for Examining Food Value Chains in Conventional and Alternative Trade -- Catherine Tucker -- Chapter 19. The Single Food Approach: A Research Strategy in Nutritional Anthropology -- Andrea Wiley and Janet Chrzan --
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9781785332883
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 254 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Research Methods for Anthropological Studies of Food and Nutrition 1
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Biocultural and archaeological research on food, past and present, often relies on very specific, precise, methods for data collection and analysis. These are presented here in a broad-based review. Individual chapters provide opportunities to think through the adoption of methods by reviewing the history of their use along with a discussion of research conducted using those methods. A case study from the author's own work is included in each chapter to illustrate why the methods were adopted in that particular case along with abundant additional resources to further develop and explore those methods.
    Description / Table of Contents: INTRODUCTION AND RESEARCH ETHICS -- Introduction and Research Design -- Janet Chrzan -- Research Ethics in Food Studies -- Sharon Devine and John Brett -- PART I: NUTRITIONAL ANTHROPOLOGY -- Chapter 1. Design in Biocultural Studies of Food and Nutritional Anthropology -- Darna Dufour and Barbara Piperata -- Chapter 2. Nutritional Anthropometry and Body Composition -- Leslie Sue Lieberman -- Chapter 3. Measuring energy expenditure in daily living: Established methods and new directions -- Mark Jenike -- Chapter 4. Dietary Analyses -- Andrea Wiley -- Chapter 5. Ethnography as a tool for formative research and evaluation in public health nutrition: illustrations from the world of infant and young child feeding -- Sera Young and Emily Tuthill -- Chapter 6. Primate Nutrition and Foodways -- Jessica Rothman and Caley Johnson -- Chapter 7. Food Episodes/Social Events: Measuring the Nutritional and Social Value of Commensality -- Janet Chrzan -- PART II: ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDY OF FOOD AND FOOD HABITS -- Chapter 8. Archeological Food and Nutrition Research -- Patti Wright -- Chapter 9. Researching Plant Food Remains from Archeological Contexts: Macroscopic, Microscopic, Chemical and Molecular Approaches -- Patti Wright -- Chapter 10. Methods for Reconstructing Diet -- Bethany Turner and Sarah Livengood -- Chapter 11. Nutritional Stress in Past Human Groups -- Alan Goodman -- Chapter 12. Research on Direct Food Remains -- Katherine Moore -- Chapter 13. If there is food, we will eat: an evolutionary and global perspective on human diet and nutrition -- Janet Monge -- Chapter 14. Experimental Archaeology, Ethnoarchaeology, and the Application of Archaeological Data to Contemporary Households and Communities -- Karen Metheny --
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9781785331589
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 518 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The "extensive wilderness" of Zambia's central Luangwa Valley is the homeland of the Valley Bisa whose cultural practices have enriched this environment for centuries. Beginning with the intrusions of warlords and later British colonials, successive generations have experienced the callousness and challenges of colonialism. Their homeland, a slender corridor surrounded by three national parks and an escarpment, is a microcosm of the political, economic and cultural battlefields surrounding most African protected areas today. The story of the Valley Bisa diverges from the myths that conservationists, administrators, and philanthropists, tell about Africa's environmental and wildlife crises.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Introduction: On Poaching an Elephant: Calling the Shots and Following the Ricochets -- SECTION I: ON BECOMING, BEING AND STAYING BISA -- Chapter 1. History and Circumstance: On becoming and Being Bisa -- Chapter 2. Creating and Sustaining a Good Life within a Difficult Environment -- Chapter 3. Never an Isolated Place Suspended in A-Historic Space -- SECTION II: ON THE QUEST FOR LOCAL SUSTAINABILITY -- Chapter 4. A Cultural Grid: Making Sense of the Natural World -- Chapter 5. Caused to Hunt: Life Histories of Three Generations (1903-2003) -- Chapter 6. Gameful Pursuits in the Bush: coping with Process and Uncertainty -- Chapter 7. Lineage Provisioning through Hunting: Changes in Scope and Scale -- Chapter 8. Muzzle-loaders and Snares: Weapons within their Cultural Contexts -- Chapter 9. Buffalo Mystique: Protein, Privilege, Power and Politics -- SECTION III: THE CHALLENGES OF DECREASING ENTITLEMENTS -- Chapter 10. On Coping within a Cornucopia of Uncertain, Constant Changes -- Afterword: Readings 'Out Loud' about Land and Wildlife as Properties -- Notes Section -- References --
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9781785330926
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 336 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: EASA Series 28
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The UNESCO World Heritage Convention of 1972 set the contemporary standard for cultural and natural conservation. Today, a place on the World Heritage List is much sought after for tourism promotion, development funding, and national prestige. Presenting case studies from across the globe, particularly from Africa and Asia, anthropologists with situated expertise in specific World Heritage sites explore the consequences of the World Heritage framework and the global spread of the UNESCO heritage regime. This book shows how local and national circumstances interact with the global institutional framework in complex and unexpected ways. Often, the communities around World Heritage sites are constrained by these heritage regimes rather than empowered by them.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction: UNESCO World Heritage – Grounded? -- Christoph Brumann and David Berliner -- PART I: CITIES -- Chapter 1. Affects and Senses in a World Heritage Site: People–House Relations in the Medina of Fez -- Manon Istasse -- Chapter 2. 'UNESCO is What?' World Heritage, Militant Islam and the Search for a Common Humanity in Mali -- Charlotte Joy -- Chapter 3. Heritage-making in Lijiang: Governance, Reconstruction and Local Naxi Life -- Yujie Zhu -- Chapter 4. Multiple Nostalgias: The Fabric of Heritage in Luang Prabang (Lao PDR) -- David Berliner -- PART II: ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES -- Chapter 5. Thinking Globally and Acting Locally in the Angkor World Heritage Site -- Keiko Miura -- Chapter 6. One List, a World of Difference? The Dynamics of Global Heritage at Two Neighbouring Properties -- Noel B. Salazar -- Chapter 7. Civilization and the Transformation of Xiaotun Village at Yin Xu Archaeological Site, China -- Shu-Li Wang -- Chapter 8. The Business of Wonder: Public Meets Private at the World Heritage Site of Chichén Itzá -- Lisa Breglia -- PART III: CULTURAL LANDSCAPES -- Chapter 9. Decolonizing the Site: The Problems and Pragmatics of World Heritage in Italy, Libya and Tanzania -- Jasper Chalcraft -- Chapter 10. The Values of Exchange and the Issue of Control: Living with (World) Heritage in Osogbo, Nigeria -- Peter Probst -- Chapter 11. Mapungubwe Cultural Landscape: Extractive Economies and Endangerment on South Africa's Borders -- Lynn Meskell -- CODA -- Conclusion: Imagining the Ground from Afar: Why the Sites are so Remote in World Heritage Committee Sessions -- Christoph Brumann --
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9781785331824
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 366 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Material Mediations: People and Things in a World of Movement 6
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In an era of intensifying globalization and transnational connectivity, the dynamics of cultural production and the very notion of creativity are in transition. Exploring creative practices in various settings, the book does not only call attention to the spread of modernist discourses of creativity, from the colonial era to the current obsession with 'innovation' in neo-liberal capitalist cultural politics, but also to the less visible practices of copying, recycling and reproduction that occur as part and parcel of creative improvization.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Creativity and Innovation in a World of Movement -- Maruška Svašek -- Chapter 1. African Lace: Agency and Transcontinental Interaction in Textile Design -- Barbara Plankensteiner -- Chapter 2. Heads against Hands and Hierarchies of Creativity -- Tereza Kuldova -- Chapter 3. The Social Life of Kottan Baskets -- Kala Shreen -- Chapter 4. Art and the Making of the Creative City of Chennai, India -- Amit Desai -- Chapter 5. Approximation as Interpretive Appropriation -- Arnd Schneider -- Chapter 6. Positioned Creativity -- Øivind Fuglerud -- Chapter 7. 'We paint our way and the Christian way together' -- Fiona Magowan and Maria Øien -- Chapter 8. Undoing Absence through Things -- Maruška Svašek -- Chapter 9. 'The Eye Likes It' -- Stine Bruland -- Chapter 10. Narratives, Movements, Objects -- João Rickli -- Chapter 11. The Art of Imitation -- Rhoda Woets -- Afterword -- Birgit Meyer -- Index --
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  • 7
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785331626
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 220 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The Gwich'in Natives of Arctic Village, Alaska, have experienced intense social and economic changes for more than a century. In the late 20th century, new transportation and communication technologies introduced radically new value systems; while some of these changes may be seen as socially beneficial, others suggest a weakening of what was once a strong and vibrant Native community. Using quantitative and qualitative data gathered since the turn of the millennium, this volume offers an interdisciplinary evaluation of the developments that have occurred in the community over the past several decades.
    Description / Table of Contents: Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- A Note on Methodology -- Introduction -- SECTION I -- Chapter 1. How Did We Get Here? An Overview of the First Century -- Chapter 2. Episcopalianism Comes to Nets'aii Country -- Chapter 3. Cleanliness, Hygiene, and Civilization Discourse: The Educational System, Past and Present -- Chapter 4. The Village, Service Provision, and Economic Development -- SECTION II -- Chapter 5. The Evolving Role of Subsistence in Nets'aii Gwich'in Life -- Chapter 6. The Environment and a Changing Climate -- Chapter 7. The Youth Are the Future -- Chapter 8. We Don't Know Where We Are Anymore -- Postscript -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9781785332647
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 162 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Questions regarding the origins, mobility, and effects of analytical concepts continue to emerge as anthropology endeavors to describe similarities and differences in social life around the world. Cutting and Connecting rethinks this comparative enterprise by calling in a conceptual debt that theoretical innovations from Melanesian anthropology owe to network analysis originally developed in African contexts. On this basis, the contributors adopt and employ concepts from recent studies of Melanesia to analyze contemporary life on the African continent and to explore how this exchange influences the borrowed anthropological perspectives. By focusing on ways in which networks are cut and connections are made, these empirical investigations show how particular relationships are created in today's Africa. In addition, the volume aims for an approach that recasts relationships between theory and place and concepts and ethnography, in a manner that destabilizes the distinction between fieldwork and writing.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: Cutting and Connecting: 'Afrinesian' Perspectives on Networks, Relationality, and Exchange -- Knut Christian Myhre -- Chapter 1. Kuru, AIDS, and Witchcraft: Reconfiguring Culpability in Melanesia and Africa -- Isak Niehaus -- Chapter 2. Law, Opacity, and Information in Urban Gambia -- Niklas Hultin -- Chapter 3. From Cutting to Fading: A Relational Perspective on Marriage Exchange and Sociality in Rural Gambia -- Tone Sommerfelt -- Chapter 4. Gathering up Mutual Help: Work, Personhood, and Relational Freedoms in Tanzania and Melanesia -- Daivi Rodima-Taylor -- Chapter 5. Rethinking Ethnographic Comparison: Persons and Networks in Africa and Melanesia -- Richard Vokes -- Chapter 6. Membering and Dismembering: The Poetry and Relationality of Animal Bodies in Kilimanjaro -- Knut Christian Myhre -- Chapter 7. The Place of Theory: Rights, Networks, and Ethnographic Comparison -- Harri Englund and Thomas Yarrow -- Afterword -- Adam Reed -- Index --
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  • 9
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785330827
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 302 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: New Directions in Anthropology 39
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The practice of karo kari allows family, especially fathers, brothers and sons, to take the lives of their daughters, sisters and mothers if they are accused of adultery. This volume examines the central position of karo kari in the social, political and juridical structures in Upper Sindh, Pakistan. Drawing connections between local contests over marriage and resources, Nafisa Shah unearths deep historical processes and power relations. In particular, she explores how the state justice system and informal mediations inform each other in state responses to karo kari, and how modern law is implicated in this seemingly ancient cultural practice.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures, Maps and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Note on Sindhi Language and Transliteration -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction: Honour Violence, Law and Power in Upper Sindh -- PART I: A FRONTIER OF HONOUR VIOLENCE - THE PROBLEM OF KARO KARI IN UPPER SINDH -- Chapter 1. Ghairat, Karo kari and the Spectacles of Violence: How Men and Women Become Black -- Chapter 2. Honour Violence, Law and Moral Power in Colonial Sindh -- PART II: HONOUR, MORAL POWER AND LAW - MIRRORING OF LAW IN THE FORMS OF VIOLENCE -- Chapter 3. Karo kari, Wali and Family Violence: Cultural Violence Mirroring Law -- Chapter 4. Violence, Kin Groups and the Feud: The Making of Frontier Justice -- PART III: NORMALISING VIOLENCE - THE EVERY DAY WORLD OF UPPER SINDH -- Chapter 5. Mediations on the Frontier: Ceremonies of Justice, Ceremonies of Faislo and the Ideology of Kheerkhandr -- Chapter 6. The Criminal Justice and 'Legal' Contests of Honour: Two Case Studies -- Chapter 7. The Sound of the Silence: Lives, Narratives and Strategies of Runaway and Missing Women of Upper Sindh -- Conclusion -- Appendices -- Appendix I: The Sindh Frontier Regulation, 1872 -- Appendix II: Text of the Provisions of Qisas and Diyat including subsequent Amendments -- Appendix IIIa: Disposal of Karo Kari Cases from 1995–2004 -- Appendix IIIb: A Sample with Details Showing Relationship of the Victim, Accused and Complainant -- Glossary -- Bibliography --
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  • 10
    ISBN: 9781785331008
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 294 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Despite its immense significance and ubiquity in our everyday lives, the complex workings of trust are poorly understood and theorized. This volume explores trust and mistrust amidst locally situated scenes of sociality and intimacy. Because intimacy has often been taken for granted as the foundation of trust relations, the ethnographies presented here challenge us to think about dangerous intimacies, marked by mistrust, as well as forms of trust that cohere through non-intimate forms of sociality.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface -- Introduction: Introducing Ethnographies of Trusting -- Vigdis Broch-Due and Margit Ystanes -- Chapter 1. Unfixed trust: Intimacy, blood symbolism, and porous boundaries in Guatemala -- Margit Ystanes -- Chapter 2. Witchcraft: the Dangers of Intimacy and the Struggle over Trust -- Peter Geschiere -- Chapter 3. Trusting the untrustworthy: a Mongolian challenge to Western notions of trust -- Paula Haas -- Chapter 4. The Puzzle of the Animal Witch: Intimacy, Trust and Sociality among Pastoral Turkana -- Vigdis Broch-Due -- Chapter 5. 'Sharing secrets': Gendered landscapes of trust and intimacy in Kenya's digital financial marketplace -- Misha Mintz-Roth and Amrik Heyer -- Chapter 6. Eddies of distrust: 'False' birth certificates and the destabilisation of relationships -- Jennifer M Speirs -- Chapter 7. Intimate documents: trust and secret police files in post-socialist Mongolia -- Chris Kaplonski -- Chapter 8. Trustworthy Bodies: Cashinahua Cumulative Persons as Intimate Others -- Cecilia McCallum -- Chapter 9. Habitus of Trust: Servitude in Colonial India -- Radhika Chopra -- Chapter 10. 'You Can Tell the Company We Done Quit': The Destruction and Reconfiguration of Trust in the Appalachian Coalfields in the Early Twentieth Century -- Gloria Goodwin Raheja --
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  • 11
    ISBN: 9781785333224
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 230 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Higher Education in Critical Perspective: Practices and Policies 2
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Public universities are in crisis, waning in their role as central institutions within democratic societies. Denunciations are abundant, but analyses of the causes and proposals to re-create public universities are not. Based on extensive experience with Action Research-based organizational change in universities and private sector organizations, Levin and Greenwood analyze the wreckage created by neoliberal academic administrators and policymakers. The authors argue that public universities must be democratically organized to perform their educational and societal functions. The book closes by laying out Action Research processes that can transform public universities back into institutions that promote academic freedom, integrity, and democracy.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- List of figures -- Introduction: Democracy and Public Universities -- PART I: PUBLIC GOODS, BILDUNG, PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES, AND DEMOCRACY -- Chapter 1. Public Goods, Democracy, and Public Universities -- Chapter 2. Multiple Models and Ideologies of Higher Education -- Chapter 3. Bildung, Academic Freedom, Academic Integrity, and Democracy -- PART II: UNIVERSITIES AS WORK ORGANIZATIONS: STAKEHOLDERS, STRUCTURES, SYSTEMS, STEERING, LEADERSHIP, AND ANTI-BILDUNG -- Chapter 4. Work Organization of Universities: Structures -- Chapter 5. Work Organization of Universities: Systemic Analysis -- Chapter 6. Processes in the Work Organization of Universities: Socio-Technical Systems Design, Networking for Power, and Neo-Taylorism -- Chapter 7. Leadership and Steering in Public Universities -- PART III: THE ROAD FORWARD: ACTION RESEARCH FOR NEUE-BILDUNG IN HIGHER EDUCATION -- Chapter 8. Action Research as a Strategy for Organizational Change -- Chapter 9. Practicing Action Research in Public Universities -- Conclusion: What Difference Could Action Research in Public Universities Make? -- Bibliography --
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  • 12
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785331800
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 260 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: With the spread of neoliberal projects, responsibility for the welfare of minority and poor citizens has shifted from states to local communities. Businesses, municipalities, grassroots activists, and state functionaries share in projects meant to help vulnerable populations become self-supportive. Ironically, such projects produce odd discursive blends of justice, solidarity, and wellbeing, and place the languages of feminist and minority rights side by side with the language of apolitical consumerism. Using theoretical concepts of economic citizenship and emotional capitalism, Economic Citizenship exposes the paradoxes that are deep within neoliberal interpretations of citizenship and analyzes the unexpected consequences of applying globally circulating notions to concrete local contexts.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Tables -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- PART I: PARADOXES OF THE PURSUIT OF SOLIDARITY AMID POLARIZING SOCIAL INEQUALITIES -- Chapter 1. Social Economy, The Quest for Social Justice under Neoliberalism -- PART II: WOMEN MAKING SENSE OF THE DEMAND TO MAKE MONEY -- Chapter 2. Vulnerabilities -- Chapter 3. Empowerments -- Chapter 4. Entitlement -- PART III: ECONOMIC CITIZENSHIP, BETWEEN THE RIGHT TO WORK TO THE OBLIGATION TO BE PRODUCTIVE -- Chapter 5. Discussion, The Emergence of a Hybrid Local Discourse on Inclusion, Productivity, and Care -- Conclusion -- References --
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9781785332258
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 228 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: WYSE Series in Social Anthropology 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: What makes people lose faith in democratic statecraft? The question seems an urgent one. In the first decades of the twenty-first century, citizens across the world have grown increasingly disillusioned with what was once a cherished ideal. Setting out an original theoretical model that explores the relations between democracy, subjectivity and sociality, and exploring its relevance to countries ranging from Kenya to Peru, The State We're In is a must-read for all political theorists, scholars of democracy, and readers concerned for the future of the democratic ideal.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: When Democracy 'Goes Wrong' -- Joanna Cook, Nicholas J. Long, and Henrietta L. Moore -- Chapter 1. After (?) Democracy: Time, Space and Affect in Peruvian Political Imaginaries -- David Nugent -- Chapter 2. Democracy and the Ethical Imagination -- Henrietta L. Moore -- Chapter 3. Why Indonesians Turn Against Democracy -- Nicholas J. Long -- Chapter 4. Opposition and Group Formation: Authoritarianism Yesterday and Today -- John Borneman -- Chapter 5. Rejecting or Remaking Democratic Practices? Experiences during Times of Crisis in Italy -- Jan-Jonathan Bock -- Chapter 6. 'The People' and Political Opposition in Post-democracy: Reflections on the Hollowing of Democracy in Greece and Europe -- Giorgos Katsambekis -- Chapter 7. Debt Society Consolidated? Post-democratic Subjectivity and its Discontents -- Yannis Stavrakakis -- Chapter 8. Politics After Democracy: Experiments in Horizontality -- Marianne Maeckelbergh -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 14
    ISBN: 9781785332395
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 305 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Studies in the Circumpolar North 1
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Nowhere have recent environmental and social changes been more pronounced than in post-Soviet Siberia. Donatas Brandišauskas probes the strategies that Orochen reindeer herders of southeastern Siberia have developed to navigate these changes. "Catching luck" is one such strategy that plays a central role in Orochen cosmology -- luck implies a vernacular theory of causality based on active interactions of humans, non-humans, material objects, and places.  Brandišauskas describes in rich details the skills, knowledge, ritual practices, storytelling, and movements that enable the Orochen to "catch luck" (or not, sometimes), to navigate times of change and upheaval.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Preface -- A Note on Transliteration -- Introduction: Luck, Spirits and Places -- Chapter 1. People I lived With: Community, Subsistence and Skills -- Chapter 2. Luck, spirits and domination -- Chapter 3. Sharing, Trust and Accumulation -- Chapter 4.'Relying On My Own Two': Walking and Luck -- Chapter 5. Living Places: Tracking Animals and Camps -- Chapter 6. Mastery of Time: Weather and Opportunities -- Chapter 7. Herding, Hunting and Ambiguity -- Chapter 8. Rock Art, Shamans and Healing -- Chapter 9. Conclusions: Ambivalence, Reciprocity and Luck -- Glossary of Orochen and Russian Terms -- Bibliography --
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  • 15
    ISBN: 9781785332838
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 174 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Material Mediations: People and Things in a World of Movement 7
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In Death, Materiality and Mediation, Barbara Graham analyzes a diverse range of objects associated with remembrance in both the public and private arenas through ethnography of communities on both sides of the Irish border. In doing so, she explores the materially mediated interactions between the living and the dead, revealing the physical, cognitive, emotional, and spiritual roles of the dead in contemporary communities. Through this study, Graham expands the concept of materiality to include narrative, song, senses, emotions, ephemera and embodied experience. She also examines how modern practices are informed by older beliefs and folk religion.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Contextualizing Death -- Chapter 1. Field Boundaries -- Chapter 2. Talking About The Dead -- Chapter 3. Sensing The Memories And The Dead -- Chapter 4. Objects Of The Dead -- Chapter 5. Collective Remembrance -- Chapter 6. Materiality In The Graveyard -- Conclusion -- Appendix --
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  • 16
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785332951
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 202 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Food, Nutrition, and Culture 5
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In Europe a number of production and communication strategies have long tried to establish local products as resources for local development. At the foot of the Alps, this scenario appears in all its contradictions, especially in relation to cheese production. The Heritage Arena focuses on the saga of Strachitunt, a cheese that has been designated an EU Protected Designation of Origin after years of negotiation and competition involving cheese-makers, merchants, and Slow Food activists. The book explores how the reinvention of cheese as a form of heritage is an ongoing and dynamic process rife with conflict and drama.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Tables, Figures and Maps -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- -- Why cheese? -- Calibrating cheese -- Post transhumant timescapes -- -- PART I: THE WAR OF THE CHEESES -- Chapter 1. Patrimonio and Tipicità -- -- The Entrepreneur as Sovereign -- The Language of Tipicità -- -- Chapter 2. Cultures of Resistance -- -- The 'Mother of all Battles': Slow Food Bitto versus PDO Bitto -- The Niche PDO: Formai de Mut -- The Unachieved PDO: Branzi -- -- Conclusion of Part I -- PART II: WE, THE PEOPLE OF VAL TELEGGIO -- Chapter 3. A geography of Opposites -- -- Straddling uplands and lowlands -- How Taleggio cheese failed the Taleggio valley -- -- Chapter 4. The Best Cheese in Italy -- -- PDO Italian Style? -- The public trial of Strachitunt -- -- Conclusion of Part II -- PART III: DULCAMARA'S SENSES -- Chapter 5. Marketing the Sensorium -- -- Slow Food and the Geometry of Val Taleggio -- Taliban and Improvers -- -- Chapter 6. Reinventing Stracchino -- -- Deciphering a Meal -- Performing Cheese -- -- Conclusion of Part III -- Conclusion -- References --
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  • 17
    ISBN: 9781782385431
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 220 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Social Identities 8
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Anthropological writings on humor are not very numerous or extensive, but they do contain a great deal of insight into the diverse mental and social processes that underlie joking and laughter. On the basis of a wide range of ethnographic and textual materials, the chapters examine the cognitive, social, and moral aspects of humor and its potential to bring about a sense of amity and mutual understanding, even among different and possibly hostile people. Unfortunately, though, cartoons, jokes, and parodies can cause irremediable distress and offence. Nevertheless, contributors' cross-cultural evidence confirms that the positive aspects of humor far outweigh the danger of deepening divisions and fueling hostilities
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- Lidia Dina Sciama -- Chapter 1. The Origins of Comic Performance in Adult-Child Interaction -- Ian Wilkie and Matthew Saxton -- Chapter 2. Learning from the Ludic: Anthropological Fieldwork -- Judith Okely -- Chapter 3. Humour as a Form of Cognition -- Elisabeth Hsu -- Chapter 4. Comic Strips and the Making of American Identity -- Ian Rakoff -- Chapter 5. Jokes without Frontiers, War without Tears: Humour, Stress and Power in an Anglo-German Bank Branch -- Fiona Moore -- Chapter 6. Laughing at the Future: Cross-Cultural Science Fiction Films -- Dolores Martinez -- Chapter 7. The English Pantomime: Toying with History, Playing with Gender, Laughing at Today -- Shirley Ardener -- Chapter 8. The Function of Satire in Italian Popular Song -- Glauco Sanga -- Chapter 9. Laughing at the Past among Venetian Islanders: Carlo Goldoni's Scuffles in Chioggia -- Lidia Dina Sciama --
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  • 18
    ISBN: 9781785330728
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 274 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Dislocations 18
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The Anthropology of Corporate Social Responsibility explores the meanings, practices, and impact of corporate social and environmental responsibility across a range of transnational corporations and geographical locations (Bangladesh, Cameroon, Chile, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana, India, Peru, South Africa, the UK, and the USA). The contributors examine the expectations, frictions and contradictions the CSR movement is generating and addressing key issues such as  the introduction of new forms of management, control, and discipline through ethical and environmental governance or the extent to which corporate responsibility challenges existing patterns of inequality rather than generating new geographies of inclusion and exclusion.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- List of Illustrations -- Introduction: Towards an Anthropology of Corporate Social Responsibility -- Catherine Dolan and Dinah Rajak -- Chapter 1. Theatres of Virtue: Collaboration Consensus and the Social Life of Corporate Social Responsibility -- Dinah Rajak -- Chapter 2. Virtuous Language in Industry and Academy -- Stuart Kirsch -- Chapter 3. Re-siting Corporate Responsibility: The Making of South Africa's Avon Entrepreneurs -- Catherine Dolan and Mary Johnstone-Louis -- Chapter 4. Power, Inequality and Corporate Social Responsibility: The Politics of Ethical Compliance in the South Indian Garment Industry -- Geert De Neve -- Chapter 5. Detachment as a Corporate Ethic: Materialising CSR in the Diamond Supply Chain -- Jamie Cross -- Chapter 6. Disconnect Development: Imagining Partnership and Experiencing Detachment in Chevron's Borderlands -- Katy Gardner -- Chapter 7. Subcontracting as Corporate Social Responsibility in the Chad-Cameroon Pipeline -- José-María Muñoz and Philip Burnham -- Chapter 8. Collective Contradictions of Corporate Environmental Conservation -- Rebecca Hardin -- Chapter 9. Engineering Responsibility: Environmental Mitigation and the Limits of Commensuration in a Chilean Mining Project -- Fabiana Li -- Chapter 10. Global Concepts in Local Contexts: CSR as 'Anti-politics Machine' in the Extractive Sector in Ghana and Peru -- Johanna Sydow -- Afterword: Big Men and Business: Morality, Debt and the Corporation: A Perspective -- Robert J. Foster -- Index --
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  • 19
    ISBN: 9781785330865
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 156 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Studies in Public and Applied Anthropology 10
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Devil worship, black magic, and witchcraft have long captivated anthropologists as well as the general public. In this volume, Jean La Fontaine explores the intersection of expert and lay understandings of evil and the cultural forms that evil assumes. The chapters touch on public scares about devil-worship, misconceptions about human sacrifice and the use of body parts in healing practices, and mistaken accusations of children practicing witchcraft. Together, these cases demonstrate that comparison is a powerful method of cultural understanding, but warns of the dangers and mistaken conclusions that untrained ideas about other ways of life can lead to.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: Understanding the Other -- Chapter 1. Hidden Enemies: Evil at the end of the Millennium -- Chapter 2. Concepts of Evil, Witchcraft and the Sexual Abuse of Children in Modern England -- Chapter 3. Ritual Murder? -- Chapter 4. Magic and medicine: The Torso in the Thames -- Chapter 5. Child Witches in London: Tradition and change in religious belief -- Chapter 6. The morality of childhood -- Chapter 7. Pastors and witches -- Chapter 8. London's witch children -- Conclusion: Continuities and changes --
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  • 20
    ISBN: 9781785330704
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 336 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Integration and Conflict Studies 12
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: For centuries, Africa's Upper Guinea Coast region has been the site of regional and global interactions, with societies from different parts of the African continent and beyond engaging in economic trade, cultural exchange, and various forms of conflict. This book provides a wide-ranging look at how such encounters have continued into the present day, identifying the disruptions and continuities in religion, language, economics, and various other social phenomena that have resulted. These accounts show a region that, while still grappling with the legacies of colonialism and the slave trade, is both shaped by and an important actor within ever-denser global networks, exhibiting consistent transformation and creative adaptation.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Maps and Figures -- Introduction: The Upper Guinea Coast in Global Perspective -- Jacqueline Knörr and Christoph Kohl -- PART I: CREOLE CONNECTIONS -- Chapter 1. Towards a Definition of Transnational as a Family Construct: An Historical and Micro Perspective -- Bruce L. Mouser -- Chapter 2. Lusocreole Culture and Identity Compared: The Cases of Guinea-Bissau and Sri Lanka -- Christoph Kohl -- Chapter 3. Freetown's Yoruba-modelled Secret Societies as Transnational and Trans-ethnic Mechanisms for Social Integration -- Nathaniel King -- PART II: DIASPORIC ENTANGLEMENTS -- Chapter 4. Contested Transnational Spaces: Debating Emigrants' Citizenship and Role in Guinean Politics -- Anita Schroven -- Chapter 5. Identity beyond ID – Diaspora within the Nation -- Markus Rudolf -- Chapter 6. The African 'Other' in the Cape Verde Islands: Interaction, Integration and the Forging of an Immigration Policy -- Pedro F. José-Marcelino -- Chapter 7. Celebrating Asymmetries – Creole Stratification and the Regrounding of Home in Cape Verdean Migrant Return Visits -- Heike Drotbohm -- PART III: TRAVELLING MODELS -- Chapter 8. Travelling Terms: Analysis of Semantic Fluctuations in the Atlantic World -- Wilson Trajano Filho -- Chapter 9. Rice and Revolution: Agrarian Life and Global Food Policy on the Upper Guinea Coast -- Joanna Davidson -- Chapter 10. Transnational and Local Models of Non-Refoulement: Youth and Women in the Moral Economy of Patronage in Post-War Liberia and Sierra Leone -- William P. Murphy -- Chapter 11. Expanding the Space for Freedom of Expression in Post-war Sierra Leone -- Sylvanus Spencer -- Chapter 12. Sierra Leone, Child Soldiers, and Global Flows of Child Protection Expertise -- Susan Shepler -- PART IV: INTERREGIONAL INTEGRATION -- Chapter 13. The 'Mandingo Question': Transnational Ethnic Identity and Violent Conflict in an Upper Guinea Border Area -- Christian K. Højbjerg† -- Chapter 14. Solo Darboe, Former Diamond Dealer: Transnational Connections and Home Politics in the Twentieth-Century Gambia -- Alice Bellagamba -- Chapter 15. Market Networks and Warfare: A Comparison of the Seventeenth Century Blade Weapons Trade and the Nineteenth Century Firearms Trade in the Casamance -- Peter Mark and José da Silva Horta -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 21
    ISBN: 9781785330841
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 284 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The first book to address the classic anthropological theme of property through the ethnography of Amazonia, Ownership and Nurture sets new and challenging terms for anthropological debates about the region and about property in general. Property and ownership have special significance and carry specific meanings in Amazonia, which has been portrayed as the antithesis of Western, property-based, civilization. Through carefully constructed studies of land ownership, slavery, shamanism, spirit mastery, aesthetics, and intellectual property, this volume demonstrates that property relations are of central importance in Amazonia, and that the ownership of persons plays an especially significant role in native cosmology.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Foreword -- James Leach -- Acknowledgements -- Map -- Introduction: Altering Ownership in Amazonia -- Marc Brightman, Carlos Fausto and Vanessa Grotti -- Chapter 1. Masters, Slaves, and Real People: Native Understandings of Ownership and Humanness in Tropical American Capturing Societies -- Fernando Santos-Granero -- Chapter 2. First Contacts, Slavery and Kinship in Northeastern Amazonia -- Vanessa Grotti and Marc Brightman -- This chapter is open access under a Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY) -- Chapter 3. Fabricating Necessity: Feeding and Commensality in Western Amazonia -- Luiz Costa -- Chapter 4. Parasitism and Subjection: Modes of Paumari Predation -- Oiara Bonilla -- Chapter 5. How Much for a Song? The Culture of Calculation and the Calculation of Culture -- Carlos Fausto -- Chapter 6. The Forgotten Pattern and the Stolen Design: Contract, Exchange and Creativity Among the Kĩsêdjê -- Marcela Stockler Coelho de Souza -- Chapter 7. Doubles and Owners: Relations of Knowledge, Property and Authorship Among the Marubo -- Pedro de Niemeyer Cesarino -- Chapter 8. Ownership and Wellbeing Among the Mebêngôkre-Xikrin: Differentiation and Ritual Crisis -- Cesar Gordon -- Chapter 9. Temporalities of Ownership: Land Possession and its Transformations Among the Tupinambá (Bahia, Brazil) -- Susana de Matos Viegas -- Index --
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  • 22
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785333309
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 180 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: This compelling volume explores how war magic and warrior religion unleash the power of the gods, demons, ghosts, and the dead. Documenting war magic and warrior religion as they are performed in diverse cultures and across historical time periods, this volume foregrounds embodiment, practice, and performance in anthropological approaches to magic, sorcery, shamanism, and religion. The authors go beyond what magic 'represents' to consider what magic does. From Chinese exorcists, Javanese spirit siblings, and black magic in Sumatra to Tamil Tiger suicide bombers, Chamorro spiritual re-enchantment, tantric Buddhist war magic, and Yanomami dark shamans, religion and magic are re-evaluated not just from the practitioner's perspective but through the victim's lived experience. These original investigations reveal a nuanced approach to understanding social action, innovation, and the revitalization of tradition in colonial and post-colonial societies undergoing rapid social transformation.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction: War Magic: Religion, Sorcery, and Performance -- D. S. Farrer -- Chapter 1. Tangki War Magic: Spirit Warfare in Singapore -- Margaret Chan -- Chapter 2. Javanese Ritual Initiation: Invulnerability, Authority, and Spiritual Improvement -- Jean-Marc de Grave -- Chapter 3. Discourse of Decline: Sumatran Perspectives on Black Magic -- J. David Neidel -- Chapter 4. Tamil Tiger Ritual, War, and Mystical Empowerment -- Michael Roberts -- Chapter 5. Shamanic Battleground in Venezuela -- Zeljko Jokic -- Chapter 6. Chants of Re-enchantment: Chamorro Spiritual Resistance to Colonial Domination -- D. S. Farrer and James D. Sellmann -- Chapter 7. War Magic and Just War in Indian Tantric Buddhism -- Iain Sinclair -- Index --
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  • 23
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785330162
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 282 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Although uncertainty is intertwined with all human activity, plans, and aspirations, it is experienced differently: at times it is obsessed over and at times it is ignored. This ethnography shows how Rashaida in north-eastern Sudan deal with unknowns from day-to-day unpredictability to life-threatening dangers. It argues that the amplification of uncertainty in some cases and its extenuation in others can be better understood by focusing on forms that can either hold the world together or invite doubt. Uncertainty, then, need not be seen solely as a debilitating problem, but also as an opportunity to create other futures.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Notes on Transliteration -- List of Abbreviations and Glossary -- Map -- Introduction: Taming Unknowns in Sudan -- Chapter 1. Towards an Anthropology of Uncertainty -- Chapter 2. Contesting Forms: Translating Poverty and Uncertainty -- Chapter 3. Insisting on Forms: Bracketing Uncertainties in Gold Mining -- Chapter 4. Standardizing Forms: Uncertain Food Supplies -- Chapter 5. Establishing Urgent Forms: Uncertainties of Ill Health -- Conclusion: Uncertainty and Forms: Asking New Questions -- References -- Index --
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  • 24
    ISBN: 9781785332418
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 332 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: European Anthropology in Translation 6
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The socio-economic transformations of the 1990s have forced many people in Poland into impoverishment. Hunters, Gatherers, and Practitioners of Powerlessness gives a dramatic account of life after this degradation, tracking the experiences of unemployed miners, scrap collectors, and poverty-stricken village residents. Contrary to the images of passivity, resignation, and helplessness that have become powerful tropes in Polish journalism and academic writing, Tomasz Rakowski traces the ways in which people actively reconfigure their lives. As it turns out, the initial sense of degradation and helplessness often gives way to images of resourcefulness that reveal unusual hunting-and-gathering skills.
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Jan Kubik -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction: The Anthropologist as a Poverty Inspector -- -- An Anthropological Shift in Perspective -- The 'Culture of Poverty': Getting Beyond the Concept -- Social Trauma and Dependency: Shift in Perspective -- Hermeneutics and Anthropology -- Towards a Method -- Maurice Merleau-Ponty – the 'Patron Saint' of the Present Ethnography -- Method: (Lack of) Ethnographic Knowledge -- Pre-textual Ethnography -- The Most Bitter Side of the Polish Transformation: Fields of Research -- The "New Poverty" -- Post-socialism: History and Experience -- The Studied Phenomena -- The Field Research -- -- Chapter 1. The Szydlowiec and Przysucha Environs (The Świętokrzyskie and Radom Foothills) -- -- A World Full of Adversities -- Unemployment and the Farming Recession -- Community of the Unemployed: Immobility, Odd Jobs and 'Tragic Scarring' -- Motionless Orchards, Motionless Fields: Failure -- Dependency and Irreversibility: A Reproof at the World -- Second-string Ecology -- The New Face of the Jobless Village -- Gatherers of Wild Herbs and Undergrowth, Gatherers of Fir Wood -- The 'New Ecology': The Convertibility of the Environment -- Collection, Conversion, Transition -- The 'Culture of Survival' -- -- Chapter 2. Wałbrzych – Boguszów-Gorce -- -- From Destruction to 'Empty' Communication: The Liquidation of the Coal Basin -- The City and the Mine -- The Highly Ambivalent Story of the Wałbrzych Basin -- Experience and Liquidation: Destruction – The City – The Body -- How to Speak of Liquidation? (Auto)aggression – Dialogue – Social Muteness -- Externalized Shame: Empty Communication and Internal Spectacles -- Facing Reality after the Mines (1) -- Complaints – Accusations – Triumphs -- A World Affected from the Outside -- Bootleg Mines, Diggers, Skills: The Body's Active Knowledge -- Rhythm, Jokes, Anecdotes: 'Scoffing at the World' -- Law and Lawlessness: Interior Spectacles -- The Grey Market: Deal-making and Resourcefulness -- The 'Internal Circulation' and the Fragmentationof Transactions -- Home-Oikos: The Internal Circulation -- Freedom in the Mines -- 'Do It Yourself' Equipment -- Working and Efficiency in Manual Labor: Resources and Deposits -- Demolition – Collecting – Objects -- Things -- Memory -- Facing Reality after the Mines (2) -- -- Chapter 3. The Bełchatów Brown Coal Mine -- The Shadowlands of the Exposed Mine -- -- The Mine/ Power Station. The Perfect Balance, an Abrupt Modernization -- Causative Alienation and Control over the Environment -- At the Margins of the Great Industry – Marginalization and Exclusion -- The Mine: Orbis Exterior -- Violence, Guilt, and the Building Sacrifice -- The Consequences of 'Excess': Metaphors of Exploitation -- The Mine: Orbis Interior -- The Players, Their Families, and Their Means of Sustenance -- Self-sufficiency, Subsistence: Gathering and Processing Goods -- Hunting and Gathering -- Wacław Okoński – The Stalker, Orbis Interior -- Goods and Trophies: The Hunting/Gathering Existence on the Edge of the Mine -- Records -- Cabinets of Curiosities, Collectors' Museums -- The Work of Memory: Reconstructions, Objects, Collections -- 'The Science of the Concrete': Inscriptions, Journals, Enumeration -- Hunters and Gatherers – Practitioners of Powerlessness -- -- Conclusion -- -- The 'Reality Testing' -- Outcome -- Beyond Anthropology -- -- Bibliography -- Materials --
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  • 25
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781785332814
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 214 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Catastrophes in Context 1
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Contextualizing Disaster offers a comparative analysis of six recent "highly visible" disasters and several slow-burning, "hidden," crises that include typhoons, tsunamis, earthquakes, chemical spills, and the unfolding consequences of rising seas and climate change. The book argues that, while disasters are increasingly represented by the media as unique, exceptional, newsworthy events, it is a mistake to think of disasters as isolated or discrete occurrences. Rather, building on insights developed by political ecologists, this book makes a compelling argument for understanding disasters as transnational and global phenomena.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction -- Gregory V. Button and Mark Schuller -- Chapter 1. A Poison Runs Through It: The Elk River Chemical Spill in West Virginia -- Gregory V. Button and Erin R. Eldridge -- Chapter 2. Whethering the Storm: The Twin Natures of Typhoons Haiyan and Yolanda -- Greg Bankoff and George Emmanuel Borrinaga -- Chapter 3. "The Tremors Felt Round the World": Haiti's Earthquake as Global Imagined Community -- Mark Schuller -- Chapter 4. Contested Narratives: Challenging the State's Neoliberal Authority in the Aftermath of the Chilean Earthquake -- Nia Parson -- Chapter 5. Decentralizing Disasters: Civic Engagement and Stalled Reconstruction after Japan's 3/11 -- Bridget Love -- Chapter 6. Expert Knowledge and the Ethnography of Disaster Reconstruction -- Roberto E. Barrios -- Chapter 7. "We Are Always Getting Ready": How Diverse Notions of Time and Flexibility Build Adaptive Capacity in Alaska and Tuvalu -- Elizabeth Marino and Heather Lazrus -- Chapter 8. Tempests, Green Teas, and the Right to Relocate: The Political Ecology of Superstorm Sandy -- Melissa Checker -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 26
    ISBN: 9781785332333
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 390 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Environmental Anthropology and Ethnobiology 21
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Trees, Knots and Outriggers (Kaynen Muyuw) is the culmination of twenty-five years of work by Frederick H. Damon and his attention to cultural adaptations to the environment in Melanesia. Damon details the intricacies of indigenous knowledge and practice in his sweeping synthesis of symbolic and structuralist anthropology with recent developments in historical ecology. This book is a long conversation between the author's many Papua New Guinea informants, teachers and friends, and scientists in Australia, Europe and the United States, in which a spirit of adventure and discovery is palpable.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- PART I: AMONG THE SCIENTISTS: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THE MASSIM -- Chapter 1. Return to the Garden: Gwed, locating intentions and interpretive puzzles -- PART II: TOWARDS AN ETHNOGRAPHY OF TREES -- Chapter 2. The Trees: Classificatory forms, landscape beacons and basic categories -- Chapter 3. The Forests and the Fire: Tasim, Inverted Landscapes, and Tree Meanings -- Chapter 4. A Story of Calophyllum. From Ecological to Social Facts -- PART III: SYNTHESIZING MODELS -- Chapter 5. Vatul: A Life Form and a Form for Life -- Chapter 6. Geometries of Motion: Trees and the Boats of the Eastern Kula Ring -- References --
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  • 27
    ISBN: 9781785331725
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 262 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: ASAO Studies in Pacific Anthropology 7
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Mortuary Dialogues presents fresh perspectives on death and mourning across the Pacific Islands. Through a set of rich ethnographies, the book examines how funerals and death rituals give rise to discourse and debate about sustaining moral personhood and community amid modernity and its enormous transformations. The book's key concept, "mortuary dialogue," describes the different genres of talk and expressive culture through which people struggle to restore individual and collective order in the aftermath of death in the contemporary Pacific.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures and Tables -- Foreword -- Shirley Lindenbaum -- Acknowledgements -- Map -- Introduction: Mortuary Ritual, Modern Social Theory and the Historical Moment in Pacific Modernity -- Eric K. Silverman and David Lipset -- PART I: TENACIOUS VOICES -- Chapter 1. Fearing the Dead: The Mortuary Rites of Marshall Islanders' amid the Tragedy of Pacific Modernity -- Laurence M. Carucci -- Chapter 2. Into the World of Sorrow: Women and the Work of Death in Maori Mortuary Rites -- Che Wilson and Karen Sinclair -- Chapter 3. Death and Experience in Rawa Mortuary Rites, Papua New Guinea -- Doug Dalton -- Chapter 4. The Knotted Person: Death, the Bad Breast and Melanesian Modernity among the Murik, Papua New Guinea -- David Lipset -- Chapter 5. Mortuary Ritual and Mining Riches in Island Melanesia -- Nicholas A. Bainton and Martha Macintyre -- PART II: EQUIVOCAL VOICES -- Chapter 6. Finishing Kapui's Name: Birth, Death and the Reproduction of Manam Society, Papua New Guinea -- Nancy C. Lutkehaus -- Chapter 7. Transformations of Male Initiation and Mortuary Rites among the Kayan of Papua New Guinea -- Alexis T. von Poser -- Chapter 8. Mortuary Failures: Traditional Uncertainties and Modern Families in the Sepik River, Papua New Guinea -- Eric K. Silverman -- Chapter 9. Everything Will Come Up Like TV, Everything Will Be Revealed: Death in an Age of Uncertainty in the Purari Delta, Papua New Guinea -- Joshua Bell -- Afterword: Mortuary Dialogues in Pacific Modernities and Anthropology -- David Lipset, Eric K. Silverman and Eric Venbrux -- Index --
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  • 28
    ISBN: 9781785333101
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 206 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Amerindian societies have an iconic status in classical political thought. For Montaigne, Hobbes, Locke, Hume and Rousseau, the native American 'state of nature' operates as a foil for the European polity. Challenging this tradition, The Imbalance of Power demonstrates ethnographically that the Carib speaking indigenous societies of the Guiana region of Amazonia do not fit conventional characterizations of 'simple' political units with 'egalitarian' political ideologies and 'harmonious' relationships with nature. Marc Brightman builds a persuasive and original theory of Amerindian politics: far from balanced and egalitarian, Carib societies are rife with tension and difference; but this imbalance conditions social dynamism and a distinctive mode of cohesion. The Imbalance of Power is based on the author's fieldwork in partnership with Vanessa Grotti, who is working on a companion volume entitled Living with the Enemy: First Contacts and the Making of Christian Bodies in Amazonia.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface -- Acknowledgements -- A note on Trio and Wayana orthography -- List of acronyms and abbreviations -- Maps -- Introduction -- -- Guianan Leadership -- Guiana -- The Trio, Wayana and Akuriyo -- Fieldwork and its Limitations -- Structure and Scope of the Book -- -- Chapter 1. Making Trio and Other Peoples -- -- Ethnogenesis -- A Theory of Continuity -- Substance and Filiation -- Telling Stories, Making Groups -- Time, History and Identity -- 'The Trio' as a Group -- Ethnogenesis and Alterity -- Missionisation and Ethnicity: The Contact of the Akuriyo -- Slavery and Identity -- Marriage and Manioc -- Strategic Ethnicity -- Leadership Inside and Out -- -- Chapter 2. Houses and In-Laws -- -- Leadership, Inequality and the House -- Houses and Housebuilders -- The House as Artefact -- The Collective House -- Scale and the Household -- Consanguinity, Affinity and the 'Atom of Politics' -- Symmetry and Asymmetry -- Leadership and the House as Idea -- -- Chapter 3. Trade, Money and Influence -- -- Economic Influence -- Exchange and Trade -- Trading with Maroons -- Money -- The Politics of Air Travel -- Airborne Evangelism -- The City, Prestige and Mobility -- Air Entrepreneurship -- Public Speaking -- Literacy -- Metaphysical Communication -- Bible Economy -- Leadership and Influence Beyond Consanguinity -- -- Chapter 4. Music and Ritual Capacities -- -- Structured Sound -- Tortoiseshell Pipes: Individual and Collective -- Rattles and Shamanism: Percussion and Harmony -- Capacity, Blowing and Song -- The Music of the Other -- Speech as Music -- Ceremonial Dialogue -- Music and Leadership -- Heterophony -- Music and Difference -- -- Chapter 5. Owning Places and Persons -- -- The Language of Possession -- Moveable Wealth -- The Value of Land -- Names and Places -- Gender Asymmetry and Women as Property -- Ownership, Wealth and Influence -- -- Conclusion: Society Transcends the State -- Glossary -- Appendix: Trio Relationship Terminology -- References --
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  • 29
    ISBN: 9781782387671
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 264 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Liminality has the potential to be a leading paradigm for understanding transformation in a globalizing world. As a fundamental human experience, liminality transmits cultural practices, codes, rituals, and meanings in situations that fall between defined structures and have uncertain outcomes. Based on case studies of some of the most important crises in history, society, and politics, this volume explores the methodological range and applicability of the concept to a variety of concrete social and political problems.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Introduction: Liminality and the Search for Boundaries -- Harald Wydra, Bjørn Thomassen, and Agnes Horvath -- PART I: FRAMING LIMINALITY -- Chapter 1. Liminality and Experience: Structuring transitory situations and transformative events -- Arpad Szakolczai -- Chapter 2. Thinking with Liminality: To the Boundaries of an Anthropological Concept -- Bjørn Thomassen -- PART II: LIMINALITY AND THE SOCIAL -- Chapter 3. Inbetweenness and Ambivalence -- Bernhard Giesen -- Chapter 4. The Genealogy of Political Alchemy: the technological invention of identity change -- Agnes Horvath -- Chapter 5. Critical Processes and Political Fluidity: a Theoretical Appraisal -- Michel Dobry -- Chapter 6. Liminality and the Frontier Myth in the Building of the American Empire -- Stephen Mennell -- Chapter 7. On the Margins of the Public and the Private: Louis XIV at Versailles -- Peter Burke -- PART III: LIMINALITY AND THE POLITICAL -- Chapter 8. Liminality, the execution of Louis XVI and the rise of terror during the French Revolution -- Camil Roman -- Chapter 9. In Search of Antistructure: The Meaning of Tahrir Square in Egypt's Ongoing Social Drama -- Mark Allen Peterson -- Chapter 10. Liminality and Democracy -- Harald Wydra -- Chapter 11. Liminality and Postcommunism: The Twenty-First Century as the Subject of History -- Richard Sakwa -- Chapter 12. The Challenge of Liminality for International Relations Theory -- Maria Malksoo -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 30
    ISBN: 9781782388869
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 272 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: The Human Economy 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Economic arrangements of Romanies are complexly related to their social position. The authors of this volume explore these complexities, including how economic exchanges forge key social relationships of gender and ethnicity, how economic opportunities are constructed and seized, and how economic success and failure are transformed into attributes of social persons. They explore how, despite - or perhaps because of - their unstable and ambiguous position within the market economy, shared today with a growing number of people facing precarity and informalisation, Roma and Gypsy communities continuously re-create more or less viable economic strategies. The ethnographically based chapters share accounts of socially and economically vulnerable populations that face their situation with self-determination and creativity.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Micol Brazzabeni, Manuela Ivone Cunha and Martin Fotta -- Chapter 1. Usury among the Slovak Roma: Notes on Relations between Lenders and Borrowers in a Segregated Taboris -- Tomáš Hrustič -- Chapter 2. New Redistributors in Times of Insecurity: Different Types of Informal Lending in Hungary -- Judit Durst -- Chapter 3. A Way of Life Flowing in the Interstices: Cigano Horse Dealers in Alentejo, Portugal -- Sara Sama Acedo -- Chapter 4. 'Endured Labour' and 'Fixing Up' Money: The Economic Strategies of Roma Migrants in Slovakia and the UK -- Jan Grill -- Chapter 5. 'I Go for Iron': Xoraxané Romá Collecting Scrap Metal in Rome -- Marco Solimene -- Chapter 6. 'I'm Good but also Mad': The Street Economy in a Poor Neighbourhood of Bucharest -- Gergő Pulay -- Chapter 7. The Mechanisms of Independence: Economic Ethics and the Domestic Mode of Production among Gabori Roma in Transylvania -- Martin Olivera -- Chapter 8. Deceit and Efficacy: Fortune Telling among the Calon Gypsies in São Paulo, Brazil -- Florencia Ferrari -- Chapter 9. Houses under Construction: Conspicuous Consumption and the Values of Youth among Romanian Cortorari Gypsies -- Cătălina Tesăr -- Chapter 10. Exchange, Shame and Strength among Calon of Bahia: A Values-Based Analysis -- Martin Fotta -- Chapter 11. 'Give and Don't Keep Anything!' Wealth, Hierarchy and Identity among the Gypsies of Two Small Towns in Andalusia, Spain -- Nathalie Manrique -- Afterword -- Keith Hart -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 31
    ISBN: 9781782386964
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 204 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Max Planck Studies in Anthropology and Economy 2
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Self-sufficiency of the house is practiced in many parts of the world but ignored in economic theory, just as socialist collectivization is assumed to have brought household self-sufficiency to an end. The ideals of self-sufficiency, however, continue to shape economic activity in a wide range of postsocialist settings. This volume's six comparative studies of postsocialist villages in Eastern Europe and Asia illuminate the enduring importance of the house economy, which is based not on the market but on the order of the house. These formations show that economies depend not only on the macro institutions of markets and states but also on the micro institutions of families, communities, and house economies, often in an uneasy relationship.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Self-Sufficiency as Reality and as Myth -- Stephen Gudeman and Chris Hann -- Chapter 1. The Ideal of Self-Sufficiency and the Reality of Dependence: A Hungarian Case -- Bea Vidacs -- Chapter 2. How Much is Enough? Household Provisioning, Self-Sufficiency and Social Status in Rural Moldova -- Jennifer R. Cash -- Chapter 3. When the Household Meets the State: Ajvar Cooking and Householding in Postsocialist Macedonia -- Miladina Monova -- Chapter 4. Self-Sufficiency is Not Enough: Ritual Intensification and Household Economies in a Kyrgyz Village -- Nathan Light -- Chapter 5. "They Work in a Closed Circle": Self-Sufficiency in House-Based Rural Tourism in the Rhodope Mountains, Bulgaria -- Detelina Tocheva -- Chapter 6. Self-Sufficiency and "Being One's Own Master" among Transylvanian Forest Dwellers -- Monica Vasile -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 32
    ISBN: 9781782387824
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 210 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Pacific Perspectives: Studies of the European Society for Oceanists 5
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: By adopting ideas like "development," members of a Papua New Guinean community find themselves continuously negotiating what can be expected of a relative or a community member. Nearly half the people born on the remote Mbuke Islands become teachers, businessmen, or bureaucrats in urban centers, while those who stay at home ask migrant relatives "What about me?" This detailed ethnography sheds light on remittance motivations and documents how terms like "community" can be useful in places otherwise permeated by kinship. As the state withdraws, Mbuke people explore what social ends might be reached through involvement with the cash economy.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Historical Roots for a Singaut Economy -- Chapter 2. Visible While Away: Concepts of Vision in Exchange Practices -- Chapter 3. The Power of Words: Curses and Blessings of Relatives -- Chapter 4. It's never tomorrow: Debt, Selfishness and the Contest of Obligation -- Chapter 5. Historical Roots for Community as Level of Organization and as a Concept -- Chapter 6. ...to benefit the community: Value and the Member of Community -- Chapter 7. All Things Considered: Organized Action as Appearances of Social Totalities -- Conclusion -- References -- Index --
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  • 33
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782385783
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 274 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Pacific Perspectives: Studies of the European Society for Oceanists 4
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Unaisi Nabobo-Baba observed that for the various peoples of the Pacific, kinship is generally understood as "knowledge that counts." It is with this observation that this volume begins, and it continues with a straightforward objective to provide case studies of Pacific kinship. In doing so, contributors share an understanding of kinship as a lived and living dimension of contemporary human lives, in an area where deep historical links provide for close and useful comparison. The ethnographic focus is on transformation and continuity over time in Fiji, Tonga, and Samoa with the addition of three instructive cases from Tokelau, Papua New Guinea, and Taiwan. The book ends with an account of how kinship is constituted in day-to-day ritual and ritualized behavior.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction: Kinship in the Pacific as Knowledge that Counts -- Christina Toren and Simonne Pauwels -- Chapter 1. The Mutual Implication of Kinship and Chiefship in Fiji -- Unaisi Nabobo-Baba -- Chapter 2. Pigs for Money: Kinship and the Monetisation of Exchange among the Truku -- Ching-Hsiu Lin -- Chapter 3. Fijian Kinship: Exchange and Migration -- Jara Hulkenberg -- Chapter 4. Gendered Sides and Ritual Moieties: Tokelau Kinship as Social Practice -- Ingjerd Hoëm -- Chapter 5. Tongan Kinship Terminology and Social Stratification -- Svenja Völkel -- Chapter 6. 'I suffered when my sister gave birth.' Transformations of the Brother–Sister Bond Among the Ankave-Anga of Papua New Guinea -- Pascale Bonnemère -- Chapter 7. The Vasu Position and the Sister's Mana. The Case of Lau (Fiji) -- Simonne Pauwels -- Chapter 8. Sister or Wife? You've Got to Choose. A Solution to the Puzzle of Village Exogamy in Samoa -- Serge Tcherkézoff -- Chapter 9. The Sister's Return. The Brother-Sister Relationship, the Tongan Fahu and the Unfolding of Kinship in Polynesia -- Françoise Douaire-Marsaudon -- Chapter 10. How Would We Have Got Here if our Paternal Grandmother Had Not Existed? Relations of Locality, Blood, Life and Name in Nasau (Fiji) -- Françoise Cayrol -- Chapter 11. How ritual articulates kinship -- Christina Toren -- Notes on Contributors --
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  • 34
    ISBN: 9781782388180
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 296 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: This phenomenologically oriented ethnography focuses on experiential aspects of Yanomami shamanism, including shamanistic activities in the context of cultural change. The author interweaves ethnographic material with theoretical components of a holographic principle, or the idea that the "part is equal to the whole," which is embedded in the nature of the Yanomami macrocosm, human dwelling, multiple-soul components, and shamans' relationships with embodied spirit-helpers. This book fills an important gap in the regional study of Yanomami people, and, on a broader scale, enriches understanding of this ancient phenomenon by focusing on the consciousness involved in shamanism through firsthand experiential involvement.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Preface and Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- -- Shamanism: Origins and Key Features -- Yanomami Shamanism: A Cross-Cultural Perspective -- The Book's Subject Matter and its Guiding Principles -- Fieldwork Setting and Methodology -- The Book's Outline -- -- Chapter 1. Life on Top of the Old Sky: Yanomami Habitat, Ethnographic Setting and Local Histories -- -- Yanomami Habitat -- Historical Migratory Movements and Encounters -- The Sweeping Winds of Change and its Consequences -- Platanal and Sheroana-theri at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century -- -- Chapter 2. Inside the Boa's Abdomen: The Yanomami Cosmos -- -- Holographic Totality of the Yanomami Cosmos -- No Patapi tëhë: The Ever-present Mythical Time of Creation -- Origin Myths -- -- Chapter 3. Hekura, Body and Illness -- -- Shamans and Hekura -- Epena: Transformative Substance and Aliment for Hekura -- Shamanism in Myths and in Contemporary Context -- Yanomami Conception of a Person and Causes of Illness -- -- Chapter 4. Hekuraprai: Corporeal Cosmogenesis -- -- Summary of the Initiatory Ordeal -- Transformation into Hekura: Day-by-Day Process -- Cosmic Body and its Dynamism -- First Trance: Re-experience of Death and the Beginning of Hekuramou -- -- Chapter 5. Oneiric Encounters -- -- Hekuramou and Expansion of Shamanistic Powers -- Dreams and Shamanism -- Dream Lucidity and the Transitional States of Dream Consciousness -- Dreams, Illness and Healing -- -- Chapter 6. Shamanic Battlefield: The Pendulum of Life and Death -- -- Shapori's New Identity and Social Obligation on the Intracommunal Level -- The Dialectics between Defensive and Offensive Hekuramou -- Body Intrusion and the Dynamics of the Cosmic Flow -- Shaporimou and Intersubjective Knowledge Diffusion -- -- Chapter 7. Two Pathways to Curing and in Between: Biomedical and Shamanic Treatment in the Life of Yanomami -- -- Shamanism and Biomedicine: Compatibility and Differences -- Dynamics of Doctor-Shapori-Patient Interaction -- Yanomami Responses to Diarrhoea, Malaria and Respiratory Infections -- -- Chapter 8. Return of the Ancestors: The All-pervading Shawara, The End of the World and the Beginning of a New Epoch -- -- The Origin of Shawara Epidemics -- Further Expansion of the Shawara Concept -- The End of the World and the Beginning of Another Cosmic Cycle -- -- Postscript: Recent Developments -- Glossary of Yanomami Terms -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 35
    ISBN: 9781782388357
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 262 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Examining street vending as a global, urban, and informalized practice found both in the Global North and Global South, this volume presents contributions from international scholars working in cities as diverse as Berlin, Dhaka, New York City, Los Angeles, Calcutta, Rio de Janeiro, and Mexico City. The aim of this global approach is to repudiate the assumption that street vending is usually carried out in the Southern hemisphere and to reveal how it also represents an essential-and constantly growing-economic practice in urban centers of the Global North. Although street vending activities vary due to local specificities, this anthology illustrates how these urban practices can also reveal global ties and developments.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction: Street Vending in the (Neoliberal) City: A Global Perspective on the Practices and Policies of a Marginalized Economy -- Kristina Graaff and Noa Ha -- PART I: RESPONDING TO URBAN AND GLOBAL NEOLIBERAL POLICIES -- Chapter 1. Flexible Families: Latina/o Food Vending in Brooklyn, New York -- Kathleen Dunn -- Chapter 2. Street Vending and the Politics of Space in New York City -- Ryan Thomas Devlin -- Chapter 3. Creative Resistance: The Case of Mexico City's Street Artisans and Vendors -- Veronica Crossa -- PART II: STREET VENDING AND ETHNICITY -- Chapter 4. Metropolitan Informality and Racialization: Street Vending in Berlin's Historical District -- Noa Ha -- Chapter 5. Selling Memory and Nostalgia in the Barrio: Mexican and Central American Women (Re)Create Street Vending Spaces in Los Angeles -- Lorena Muñoz -- Chapter 6. Ethnic Contestations over African American Fiction: The Street Vending of Street Literature in New York City -- Kristina Graaff -- PART III: THE SPATIAL MOBILITY OF URBAN STREET VENDING -- Chapter 7. The Urbanism of Los Angeles Street Vending -- Kenny Cupers -- Chapter 8. Selling in Insecurity-Living with Violence: Eviction Drives against Street Food Vendors in Dhaka, and the Informal Politics of Exploitation -- Benjamin Etzold -- Chapter 9. The Street Vendors Act and Pedestrianism in India: A Reading of the Archival Politics of the Calcutta Hawker Sangram Committee -- Ritajyoti Bandyopadhyay -- PART IV: HISTORICAL ACCOUNTS OF STREET VENDING -- Chapter 10. Street Vending, Political Activism, and Community Building in African American History: The Case of Harlem -- Mark Naison -- Chapter 11. The Roots of Street Commerce Regulation in the Urban Slave Society of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil -- Patricia Acerbi -- Notes on Contributors --
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  • 36
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782389491
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 282 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: New Directions in Anthropology 38
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Based on a detailed ethnography, this book explores the promises and expectations of tourism in Cuba, drawing attention to the challenges that tourists and local people face in establishing meaningful connections with each other. Notions of informal encounter and relational idiom illuminate ambiguous experiences of tourism harassment, economic transactions, hospitality, friendship, and festive and sexual relationships. Comparing these various connections, the author shows the potential of touristic encounters to redefine their moral foundations, power dynamics, and implications, offering new insights into how contemporary relationships across difference and inequality are imagined and understood.
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Nelson Graburn -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Relating through Tourism -- PART I: ACHIEVING ENCOUNTERS -- Chapter 1. Tourism in Cuba -- Chapter 2. Shaping Expectations -- Chapter 3. Gaining Access -- Chapter 4. Getting in Touch -- PART II: SHAPING RELATIONS -- Chapter 5. Commodity Exchange and Hospitality -- Chapter 6. Friendliness and Friendship -- Chapter 7. Partying and Seducing -- Chapter 8. Seduction and Commoditized Sex -- Conclusion: Treasuring Fragile Relations -- References -- Endnotes --
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  • 37
    ISBN: 9781782385677
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 270 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Material Mediations: People and Things in a World of Movement 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Despite the wide interest in material culture, art, and aesthetics, few studies have considered them in light of the importance of the social imagination - the complex ways in which we conceptualize our social surroundings. This collection engages the "material turn" in the arts, humanities, and social sciences through a range of original contributions on creativity in diverse global and contemporary social settings. The authors engage with everyday objects, art, rituals, and ethnographic exhibitions to analyze the relationship between material culture and the social imagination. What results is a better understanding of how the material embodies and influences our idea of the social world.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction -- Øivind Fuglerud & Leon Wainwright -- PART I: MUSEUMS -- Chapter 1. Contemporary Iroquois Art between Ethnographic Museum, Art Gallery and Global Market Place: Reflections on the Politics of Identity and Representation -- Sylvia S. Kasprycki -- Chapter 2. De-connecting Relations: Exhibitions and Objects as Resistance -- Peter Bjerregaard -- Chapter 3. Materializing Islam and the Imaginary of Sacred Space -- Saphinaz-Amal Naguib -- PART II: PRESENCE -- Chapter 4. Visible While Away: Migration, Personhood and the Movement of Money amongst the Mbuke of Papua New Guinea -- Anders Emil Rasmussen -- Chapter 5. Being there while Being here: Long-distance Aesthetics and Sensations in Tamil National Rituals -- Stine Bruland -- Chapter 6. Food Presentations Moving Overseas: Ritual Aesthetics and Everyday Sociality in Tonga and among Tongan Migrants -- Arne Aleksej Perminow -- Chapter 7. Imaginations at War: The Ephemeral and the Fullness of Life in Southwest China -- Katherine Swancutt -- Chapter 8. How Pictures Matter. Religious Objects and the Imagination in Ghana -- Birgit Meyer -- PART III: ART -- Chapter 9. Art as Empathy: Imaging Transfers of Meaning and Emotion in Urban Aboriginal Australia -- Fiona Magowan -- Chapter 10. Transvisionary Imaginations: Artistic Subjectivity and Creativity in Tamil Nadu -- Amit Desai and Maruška Svašek -- Chapter 11. An Indian Cocktail of Value/s and Desire: On the 'Artification' of Whisky and Fashion -- Tereza Kuldova -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 38
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782387299
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 260 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Integration and Conflict Studies 11
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The Cameroon Grassfields, home to three ethnic groups – Grassfields societies, Mbororo, and Hausa – provide a valuable case study for the anthropological examination of identity politics and interethnic relations. In the midst of the political liberalization of Cameroon in the late 1990s and 2000s, local responses to political and legal changes took the form of a series of performative and discursive expressions of ethnicity. Confrontational encounters stimulated by economic and political rivalry, as well as socially integrative processes, transformed collective self-understanding in Cameroon in conjunction with recent global discourses on human, minority, and indigenous rights. The book provides a vital contribution to the study of ethnicity, conflict, and social change in the anthropology of Africa.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- Notes on Transliteration -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Setting the Scene: Cultural Difference and Political Rivalry in Times of Transition -- Chapter 2. The Power of the Fon: Nchaney Political History -- Chapter 3. From Pastoral Society to Indigenous People: Mbororo Identity Politics -- Chapter 4. A Shift to Economic Competition? Farmer–Herder Conflict and Cattle Theft in the Misaje Area -- Chapter 5. On Being Hausa: Consolidation of the Hausa Ethnic Category in the Grassfields -- Chapter 6. Grassfielder by Birth, Muslim by Choice: Religious and Ethnic Conversion -- Chapter 7. The Murder of Mr X: Legal Pluralism and Conflict Management in the Early 2000s -- Epilogue -- Glossary -- References -- Index --
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  • 39
    ISBN: 9781782386315
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 212 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The reindeer herders of Aoluguya, China, are a group of former hunters who today see themselves as "keepers of reindeer" as they engage in ethnic tourism and exchange experiences with their Ewenki neighbors in Russian Siberia. Though to some their future seems problematic, this book focuses on the present, challenging the pessimistic outlook, reviewing current issues, and describing the efforts of the Ewenki to reclaim their forest lifestyle and develop new forest livelihoods. Both academic and literary contributions balance the volume written by authors who are either indigenous to the region or have carried out fieldwork among the Aoluguya Ewenki since the late 1990s.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of illustrations -- Foreword -- F. Georg Heyne -- Acknowledgements -- Map of Aoluguya -- Contributors -- PART I: ENCOUNTERING THE EWENKI -- Introduction: Writing the 'Reindeer Ewenki' -- Åshild Kolås -- Chapter 1. From Nomads to Settlers: A History of the Aoluguya Ewenki (1965–1999) -- Si Qinfu -- PART II: MIGRATIONS: REINDEER HERDING IN FLUX -- Chapter 2. In the Forest Pastures of the Reindeer -- Tang Ge -- Chapter 3. Ambiguities of the Aoluguya Ewenki -- Åshild Kolås -- Chapter 4. The Many Faces of Nomadism among the Reindeer Ewenki: Uses of Land, Mobility and Exchange Networks -- Aurore Dumont -- PART III: REPRESENTATIONS: DEFINING THE REINDEER EWENKI CULTURE AND IDENTITY -- Chapter 5. A Passage from Forest to State: The Aoluguya Ewenki and their Museums -- Bai Ying and Zhang Rongde -- Chapter 6. The Ecological Migration and Ewenki Identity -- Xie Yuanyuan -- Chapter 7. Tents, Taiga and Tourist Parks: Vernacular Ewenki Architecture and the State -- Richard Fraser -- PART IV: LOCAL VOICES -- Chapter 8. Campfire -- Weijia -- Chapter 9. My Homeland -- Gong Yu -- Chapter 10. Hunting along the Bei'erci River -- Gu Xinjun -- Glossary -- Index --
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  • 40
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782388234
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 204 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: On the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, rural villages, traditional artefacts, even atmospheres and experiences are considered heritage. Heritage making not only protects, but also produces, things, people, and places. Since the Republic of Cyprus joined the European Union in 2004, heritage making and Europeanization are increasingly intertwined in Greek-Cypriot society. Against the backdrop of a long-term ethnographic engagement, the author argues that heritage emerges as an increasingly standardized economic resource, a "European product." Implemented in historic preservation, rural tourism, culinary traditions, nature protection, and urban restoration projects, heritage policy has become infused with transnational market regulations and neoliberal property regimes.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- Abbreviations -- Introduction -- -- 'Past Presencing' on the European Periphery -- European Products -- Cyprus: Postcoloniality, Division, and EU Accession -- Fieldwork in Cyprus: Ethnographic Modalities -- About this book -- -- PART I: HERITAGE REGIMES -- Chapter 1. Preserving Vernacular Architecture -- -- Heritage and Nationalism in Cyprus -- Villages Frozen in Time Preservation Standards and Aesthetic Control -- Conclusion: 'Streamlined Along the European Prototype' -- -- Chapter 2. Packaging Hospitality -- -- A Sustainable Alternative to Mass Tourism -- The Philoxenia Standard -- 'Branding the Culture of the Villages' -- Conclusion: The Creation of Tourist Spaces -- Digression: Difficult Heritage -- -- Chapter 3. Inventing the Rural -- -- A Lesson in Development -- European Union Policies -- Upgrading the Rural Heritage -- Conclusion: The Rural as a European Product -- -- PART II: FOOD, CULTURE AND HERITAGISATION -- Chapter 4. 'Full Meze': Tourism, Modernity, Crisis -- -- The Cultural Logic of Mass Tourism -- What Makes Meze Cypriot? -- Performing Asymmetry -- Modernity and the Mutations of Cypriot Meze -- Conclusion: Wasting or Sharing? -- -- Chapter 5. 'Origin Food': The Struggle over Halloumi/Hellim -- -- Contested Claims -- Pure Products, Messy Histories -- The Europeanization of Cheese Making -- Managed Diversity -- The Ingredients of Tradition -- Conclusion: Heritage Effects and Property Regimes -- -- PART III: AMBIENT HERITAGE -- Chapter 6. The Nature of Heritage Making: Environmental Governance -- -- Forces: Land Ownership, the Postcolonial State and the Privatization of the Coast -- Connections: Contested Natures and the Transnational Arena -- Imaginations: Local Communities and Moral Economies -- Conclusion: The Making of Biodiversity -- -- Chapter 7. The Divided City: Europe and the Politics of Culture -- -- Dissected Urban Space -- The Nicosia Master Plan: Regeneration and Reconciliation -- Crossing the Divide: Transnational Cultural Diplomacy and the Old Town -- Remaking Lefkosia: Artists, Immigrants, and World-Class Architecture -- 'Get In the Zone': Competing for the European Title -- Conclusion: Ambience for sale. Nature and Culture as Economic Assets -- -- Conclusion -- -- Heritagisation as a Vector of Europeanization -- Standardization: Sameness or Difference? -- Unmaking Heritage -- Neoliberal Europeanization -- One year later: What comes after 'the crusade of greed'? -- A Postcolonial Reading of the Crisis -- -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 41
    ISBN: 9781782385530
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 260 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Environmental Anthropology and Ethnobiology 20
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The global agenda of Nature conservation has led to the creation of the Masoala National Park in Madagascar and to an exhibit in its support at a Swiss zoo, the centerpiece of which is a mini-rainforest replica. Does such a cooperation also trigger a connection between ordinary people in these two far-flung places? The study investigates how the Malagasy farmers living at the edge of the park perceive the conservation enterprise and what people in Switzerland see when looking towards Madagascar through the lens of the zoo exhibit. It crystallizes that the stories told in either place have almost nothing in common: one focuses on power and history, the other on morality and progress. Thus, instead of building a bridge, Nature conservation widens the gap between people in the North and the South.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements / Fisaorana -- Notes on Text -- Introduction -- PART I -- Chapter 1. A Virtual Tour through Little Masoala -- Chapter 2. Intention and Perception -- Chapter 3. Zooming in on Morality -- Chapter 4. A Kind of People -- Chapter 5. The Coconut Schema -- Extract from 'Marrakech' by George Orwell -- PART II -- Chapter 6. Living With the Masoala National Park -- Chapter 7. The Banana Plant and the Moon -- Chapter 8. The Island of the Wanderer -- Chapter 9. Who Are 'They'? -- Chapter 10. Historical Reflections -- Conclusion -- References --
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  • 42
    ISBN: 9781782386100
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 290 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Periods of transition are often symbolically associated with death, making the latter the paradigm of liminality. Yet, many volumes on death in the social sciences and humanities do not specifically address liminality. This book investigates these "ultimate ambiguities," assuming they can pose a threat to social relationships because of the disintegrating forces of death, but they are also crucial periods of creativity, change, and emergent aspects of social and religious life. Contributors explore death and liminality from an interdisciplinary perspective and present a global range of historical and contemporary case studies outlining emotional, cognitive, artistic, social, and political implications.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Introduction -- Peter Berger -- PART I: RITUALS -- Chapter 1. The Ambiguity of Mortal Remains, Substitute Bodies, and other Materializations of the Dead among the Garo of Northeast India -- Erik de Maaker -- Chapter 2. Structures and Processes of Liminality: The Shape of Mourning among the Sora of Tribal India -- Piers Vitebsky -- Chapter 3. Liminal Bodies, Liminal Food: Hindu and Tribal Death Rituals Compared -- Peter Berger -- Chapter 4. The Liminality of "Living Martyrdom": Suicide Bombers' Preparations for Paradise -- Pieter G. T. Nanninga -- PART II: CONCEPTS -- Chapter 5. Disappearance and Liminality: Argentina's Mourning of State Terror -- Antonius C.G.M. Robben -- Chapter 6. Three Dimensions of Liminality in the Context of Kyrgyz Death Rituals -- Roland Hardenberg -- Chapter 7. Death, Ritual, and Effervescence -- Peter Berger -- PART III: IMAGERIES -- Chapter 8. Hungry Ghost or Divine Soul? Post-Mortem Initiation in Medieval Shaiva Tantric Death Rites -- Nina Mirnig -- Chapter 9. Between Death and Judgement: Sleep as the Image of Death in Early Modern Protestantism -- Justin Kroesen and Jan R. Luth -- Chapter 10. Body and Soul Between Death and Funeral in Archaic Greece -- Jan N. Bremmer -- Chapter 11. Death, Memory and Liminality. Rethinking Lampedusa's Later Life as Author and Aristocrat -- Yme B. Kuiper -- Notes on Contributors --
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  • 43
    ISBN: 9781782386186
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 392 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Based on fieldwork largely collected during the CPA interim period by Sudanese and European researchers, this volume sheds light on the dynamics of change and the relationship between microscale and macroscale processes which took place in Sudan between the 1980s and the independence of South Sudan in 2011. Contributors' various disciplinary approaches-socio-anthropological, geographical, political, historical, linguistic-focus on the general issue of "access to resources." The book analyzes major transformations which affected Sudan in the framework of globalization, including land and urban issues; water management; "new" actors and "new conflicts"; and language, identity, and ideology.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on the Transliteration of Arabic Terms -- List of Abbreviations -- General Map of Sudan -- Introduction: Multidimensional Change in Sudan 1989-2011: Insights from Fieldwork -- Barbara Casciarri, Munzoul A.M. Assal and François Ireton -- PART I: LAND ISSUES AND LIVELIHOODS IN THE CAPITAL REGION AND RURAL AREAS -- Chapter 1. Old-timers and New-comers in Al-Ṣālḥa: Dynamics of Land Allocation in an Urban Periphery -- Munzoul A.M. Assal -- Chapter 2. Urban Agriculture Facing Land Pressure in Greater Khartoum: The Case of New Real Estate Projects in Tuti and Abū Seʿīd -- Alice Franck -- Chapter 3. Access Strategies to Some Economic and Social Resources among Recent Migrants in the Outskirts of Khartoum : the Example of Bawga Al-Sharīg -- François Ireton -- Chapter 4. Contested Land Rights and Ethnic Conflict in Mornei (West Darfur): Scarcity of Resources or Crises of Governance? -- Zahir M. Abdal-Kareem and Musa A. Abdul-Jalil -- PART II: WATER RESOURCES AT THE CORE OF LOCAL AND GLOBAL INTERACTIONS -- Chapter 5. Sudan's Hydropolitics: Regional Chess Games, National Hegemony and Local Resistance -- Harry Verhoeven -- Chapter 6. Local Management of Urbanized Water: Exchanges among Neighbours, Household Actions and Identity in Deim (Khartoum) -- Luisa Arango -- Chapter 7. Domestic Water Supply and Management in Northern Kordofan Villages: Al-Loweib as an Example -- Elsamawal Khalil Makki -- Chapter 8. Water Management among pastoral Sudanese Pastoralists: End of the Commons or 'Silent Resistance' to Commoditization? -- Barbara Casciarri -- PART III: NEW ACTORS, NEW SPACES AND NEW IMAGINATION ON CONFLICTS -- Chapter 9. Asian Players in Sudan: Social and Economic Impacts of 'New-Old' Actors -- Irene Panozzo -- Chapter 10. Oil Exploration and Conflict in Sudan: the Predicament for Pastoralists in North-South Borderline States -- Abdalbasit Saeed -- Chapter 11. What Place in Khartoum for the Displaced? Between State Regulation and Individual Strategies -- Agnès de Geoffroy -- Chapter 12. Activist Mobilization and the Internationalization of the Darfur Crisis -- Maria Gabrielsen Jumbert -- PART IV: RESHAPING LANGUAGES, IDENTITIES AND IDEOLOGIES -- Chapter 13. The Islamic Movement and Power in Sudan: From Revolution to Absorption into the State -- Giorgio Musso -- Chapter 14. Language Policy and Planning in the Sudan: From Local Vernaculars to National Languages -- Ashraf Abdelhay, Al-Amin Abu Manga and Catherine Miller -- Chapter 15. 'One Tribe, One Language': Ethno-Linguistic Identity and Language Revitalization among the Laggorí in the Nuba Mountains -- Stefano Manfredi -- Chapter 16. Between Ideological Security and Intellectual Plurality: 'Colonialism' and 'Globalization' in Northern Sudanese Educational Discourses -- Iris Seri-Hersch -- Epilogue. A New Sudan? -- Roland Marchal -- Notes on Contributors -- Bibliography --
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  • 44
    ISBN: 9781782386643
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 248 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Anthropological inquiry developed around the study of the exotic. Now that we live in a world that seems increasingly familiar, putatively marked by a spreading sameness, anthropology must re-envision itself. The emergence of diverse national traditions in the discipline offers one intriguing path. This volume, the product of a novel encounter of American anthropologists of France and French anthropologists of the United States, explores the possibilities of that path through an experiment in the reciprocal production of knowledge. Simultaneously native subjects, foreign experts, and colleagues, these scholars offer novel insights into each other's societies, juxtaposing glimpses of ourselves and a familiar "others" to productively unsettle and enrich our understanding of both.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: Toward reciprocal anthropology -- Anne Raulin and Susan Carol Rogers -- PART I: DISTINCTIONS: CLASS, RACE, CULTURE -- Chapter 1. Homeless People (Paris, Los Angeles): The principle of equality seen from below -- Patrick Gaboriau -- Chapter 2. The Moral Public Sphere: Integration and discrimination in a French New Town -- Beth Epstein -- Chapter 3. Creolization, Racial Imagination and the Music Market in French Louisiana -- Sara Le Menestrel -- Chapter 4. Claiming Culture, Defending Culture: Perspectives on culture in France and the United States -- David Beriss -- PART II: KEY WORDS: COMMUNITY, HEALING -- Chapter 5. Gay Activism and the Question of Community -- William Poulin-Deltour -- Chapter 6. Confronting "Community": From Rural France to the Vietnamese Diaspora -- Deborah Reed-Danahay -- Chapter 7. Healing the Community: Ethics and ancestry in Orisha religious practices in the United States -- Stefania Capone -- Chapter 8. Healing at the Foot of the Twin Towers: Beyond the trauma of 9/11 -- Anne Raulin -- PART III: MYTHS: ENDLESS POSSIBILITY, COUNTRYSIDES -- Chapter 9. To Live in a World of Possibilities: A New Age version of the American Myth -- Christian Ghasarian -- Chapter 10. Faux Amis in the Countryside: Deciphering the familiar -- Susan Carol Rogers -- Index --
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  • 45
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782386001
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 214 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In Australia, a 'tribe' of white, middle-class, progressive professionals is actively working to improve the lives of Indigenous people. This book explores what happens when well-meaning people, supported by the state, attempt to help without harming. 'White anti-racists' find themselves trapped by endless ambiguities, contradictions, and double binds - a microcosm of the broader dilemmas of postcolonial societies. These dilemmas are fueled by tension between the twin desires of equality and difference: to make Indigenous people statistically the same as non-Indigenous people (to 'close the gap') while simultaneously maintaining their 'cultural' distinctiveness. This tension lies at the heart of failed development efforts in Indigenous communities, ethnic minority populations and the global South. This book explains why doing good is so hard, and how it could be done differently. 
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Preface -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Studying Good -- Chapter 2. The Culture of White Anti-racism -- Chapter 3. Tiwi 'Long Grassers' -- Chapter 4. Welcome to Country -- Chapter 5. Mutual Recognition -- Chapter 6. White Stigma -- Conclusion -- References -- Index --
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  • 46
    ISBN: 9781785330766
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 124 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Critical Interventions: A Forum for Social Analysis 15
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The January 2015 shooting at the headquarters of satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris and the subsequent attacks that took place in the Île-de-France region were staggeringly violent events. They sparked an enormous discussion among citizens and intellectuals from around Europe and beyond. By analyzing the effects the attacks have had in various spheres of social life, including the political, ideology, collective imaginaries, the media, and education, this collection of essays aims to serve as a contribution as well as a critical response to that discussion. The volume observes that the events being attributed to Charlie Hebdo go beyond sensationalist reports of the mainstream media, transcend the spatial confines of nation states, and lend themselves to an ever-expanding number of mutating discursive formations.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: The Event of Charlie Hebdo - Imaginaries of Freedom and Control -- Bjørn Enge Bertelsen and Alessandro Zagato -- -- The Barbariat and Democratic Tolerance -- Knut Rio -- Charlie Hebdo: The West and the Sacred -- Axel Rudi -- The Thoughtcrimes of an Eight-Year-Old -- Maria Dyveke Styve -- Imaginaries of Violence and Surrogates for Politics -- Alessandro Zagato -- Where Were You, Charlie? Contesting Voices of Political Activism in the Wake of a Tragedy -- Mari Hanssen Korsbrekke -- Moral, All-Too Moral: Satire, Morality, and Charlie Hebdo -- Jacob Hjortsberg -- On Blasphemy: The Paradoxes of Protecting and Mocking God -- Theodoros Rakopoulos -- -- Afterword: When a Joke is Not a Joke? The Paradox of Egalitarianism -- Bruce Kapferer --
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  • 47
    ISBN: 9781782384892
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 238 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The relationships between science and religion are about to enter a new phase in our contemporary world, as scientific knowledge has become increasingly relevant in ordinary life, beyond the institutional public spaces where it traditionally developed. The purpose of this volume is to analyze the relationships, possible articulations and contradictions between religion and science as forms of life: ways of engaging human experience that originate in particular social and cultural formations. Contributions use this theoretical and ethnographic research to explore different scientific and religious cultures in the contemporary world.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: Science, Religion and Forms of Life -- Carles Salazar -- PART I: COGNITION -- Chapter 1. Maturationally Natural Cognition Impedes Professional Science and Facilitates Popular Religion -- Robert N. McCauley -- Chapter 2. Scientific vs. Religious 'Knowledge' in Evolutionary Perspective -- Michael Blume -- Chapter 3. Magic and Ritual in an Age of Science -- Jesper Sørensen -- PART II: BEYOND SCIENCE -- Chapter 4. Moral Employments of Scientific Thought -- Timothy Jenkins -- Chapter 5. The Social Life of Concepts: Public and Private 'Knowledge' of Scientific Creationism -- Simon Coleman -- Chapter 6. The Embryo, Sacred and Profane -- Marit Melhuus -- Chapter 7. The Religions of Science and the Sciences of Religion in Brazil. -- Roger Sansi-Roca -- Chapter 8. Science in Action, Religion in Thought: Catholic Charismatics' Notions about Illness -- Maria Coma -- PART III: MEANING SYSTEMS -- Chapter 9. On the Resilience of Superstition -- João de Pina-Cabral -- Chapter 10. Religion, Magic and Practical Reason: Meaning and Everyday Life in Contemporary Ireland -- Tom Inglis -- Chapter 11. Can the Dead Suffer Traumas? Religion and Science after the Vietnam War -- Heonik Kwon -- Notes on Contributors --
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  • 48
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782386162
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 296 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: EASA Series 25
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Approaching "work" as at heart a practice of exchange, this volume explores sociality in work environments marked by the kind of structural changes that have come to define contemporary "flexible" capitalism. It introduces anthropological exchange theory to a wider readership, and shows how the perspective offers new ways to enquire about the flexible capitalism's social dimensions. The essays contribute to a trans-disciplinary scholarship on contemporary economic practice and change by documenting how, across diverse settings, "gift-like" socialities proliferate, and even sustain the intensified flexible commoditization that more commonly is touted as tearing social relations apart. By interrogating a keenly debated contemporary work regime through an approach to sociality rooted in a rich and distinct anthropological legacy, the volume also makes a novel contribution to the anthropological literature on work and on exchange.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Jens Kjaerulff -- Chapter 1. Everybody Gives: Gifts in the Global Factory -- Jamie Cross -- Chapter 2. Unveiling the Work of the Gift: Neoliberalism and the Flexible Margins of Nation-State -- Tinna Grétarsdóttir -- Chapter 3. Flexibility Frictions: Economies of Connection in Contemporary Forms of Work -- Christina Garsten -- Chapter 4. Taking Over the Gift: The Circulation and Exchange of Options, Labour and 'Lucky Money' in Alberta's Oil and Gas Industry -- Caura Wood -- Chapter 5. How to Stay Entangled in a World of Flows: Flexible Subjects and Mobile Knowledge in the New Media Industries -- Hannah Knox -- Chapter 6. The Payoff of Love and the Traffic of Favours: Reciprocity, Social Capital and the Blurring of Value Realms in Flexible Capitalism -- Susana Narotzky -- Chapter 7. Flexible Capitalism and Transactional Orders in Colonial and Postcolonial Mauritius: A Post-Occidentalist View -- Patrick Neveling -- Chapter 8. The Corrosion of Character Revisited: Rethinking Uncertainty and Flexibility -- Jens Kjaerulff -- Chapter 9. Afterword: Exchange and Corporate Forms Today -- Keir Martin -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 49
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782386339
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 238 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Reindeer-herding Ewenki hunters have lived in the forests of China's Greater Khingan Range for over three hundred years. They have sustained their livelihoods by collecting plants and herbs, hunting animals and herding reindeer. This ethnography details changing Ewenki ways of life brought first by China's modernization and development policies and more recently by ecological policies that aim to preserve and restore the badly damaged ecologies of western China. Xie reflects on modernization and urbanization in China through this study of ecological migration policies and their effects on relocated Aoluguya Ewenki hunters.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Foreword -- Ping Hao -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Maps -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Living with Ewenki Hunters -- Chapter 2. The Culture of Reindeer Ewenki and Historical Settlements -- Chapter 3. Ecological Migration Path -- Chapter 4. Post-Migration Issues -- Chapter 5. Aftermath and Future -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 50
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782386414
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 240 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: New Directions in Anthropology 37
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Mauritian independence in 1968 marked the end of a regime favorable to the Franco-Mauritians, the island's white colonial elite. Now, in postcolonial Mauritius, this group is faced with a much more diverse power constellation and often feels in competition with others vying for their privileges. Though this is a clear departure from the colonial heydays, Franco-Mauritians have been able to continue their elite position into the early twenty-first century. This book focuses on the power of white elites still lingering on in postcolonial realities, and with regards to elites and power in general, addresses anew how an elite group aims to prolong its position over time.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction -- Chapter 1. No Man's Land -- Chapter 2. Defending White Hegemony -- Chapter 3. Between Confrontation and Collaboration -- Chapter 4. A Culture of Economic Privileges -- Chapter 5. Unity in Diversity -- Chapter 6. The Elite Symbolism of White Skin Colour -- Conclusion -- References -- Index --
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  • 51
    ISBN: 9781782387749
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 244 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: An ethnographic portrayal of the lives of white citizens of the Okavango Delta, Botswana, this book examines their relationships with the natural and social environments of the region. In response to the insecurity of their position as a European-descended minority in a postcolonial African state, Gressier argues that white Batswana have developed cultural values and practices that have allowed them to attain high levels of belonging. Adventure is common for this frontier community, and the book follows their safari lifestyles as they construct and perform localized identities in their interactions with dangerous wildlife, the broader African community, and the global elite via their work in the nature-tourism industry.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Maps -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Waiting for the Flood -- Chapter 1. Connections to the Natural Environment -- Chapter 2. Photographic Tourism, Emplacement and Belonging -- Chapter 3. Hunting and Ambiguity in Belonging -- Chapter 4. Belonging and the Nation -- Chapter 5. Race Relations and Community Ties in the Okavango -- Conclusion: Making a Plan to Belong -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 52
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782385615
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 338 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Witchcraft violence is a feature of many contemporary African societies. In Ghana, belief in witchcraft and the malignant activities of putative witches is prevalent. Purported witches are blamed for all manner of adversities including inexplicable illnesses and untimely deaths. As in other historical periods and other societies, in contemporary Ghana, alleged witches are typically female, elderly, poor, and marginalized. Childhood socialization in homes and schools, exposure to mass media, and other institutional mechanisms ensure that witchcraft beliefs are transmitted across generations and entrenched over time. This book provides a detailed account of Ghanaian witchcraft beliefs and practices and their role in fueling violent attacks on alleged witches by aggrieved individuals and vigilante groups.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Witchcraft Violence in Comparative Perspective -- Chapter 1. Ghana: The Research Setting -- Chapter 2. Witchcraft Beliefs in Ghana -- Chapter 3. Socialization into Witchcraft Beliefs -- Chapter 4. Witchcraft Themes in Popular Ghanaian Music -- Chapter 5. Witchcraft Imagery in Akan Proverbs -- Chapter 6. Witchcraft Trials in Ghanaian Courts -- Chapter 7. Witch Killings -- Chapter 8. Non-Lethal Treatment of Alleged Witches -- Chapter 9. Gendered Victimization: Patriarchy, Misogyny, and Gynophobia -- Conclusion: Curbing Witchcraft-Related Violence in Ghana -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 53
    ISBN: 9781782385707
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 214 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Max Planck Studies in Anthropology and Economy 1
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: According to accepted wisdom, rational practices and ritual action are opposed. Rituals drain wealth from capital investment and draw on a mode of thought different from practical ideas. The studies in this volume contest this view. Comparative, historical, and contemporary, the six ethnographies extend from Macedonia to Kyrgyzstan. Each one illuminates the economic and ritual changes in an area as it emerged from socialism and (re-)entered market society. Cutting against the idea that economy only means markets and that market action exhausts the meaning of economy, the studies show that much of what is critical for a people's economic life takes place outside markets and hinges on ritual, understood as the negation of the everyday world of economising.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Introduction: Ritual, Economy and the Institutions of the Base -- Stephen Gudeman and Chris Hann -- Chapter 1. Economy as Ritual: The Problems of Paying in Wine -- Jennifer Cash -- Chapter 2. Animals in the Kyrgyz Ritual Economy: Symbolic and Moral Dimensions of Economic Embedding -- Nathan Light -- Chapter 3. From Pig-Sticking to Festival: Changes in Pig-Sticking Practices in the Hungarian Countryside -- Bea Vidacs -- Chapter 4. Kurban: Shifting Economy and the Transformations of a Ritual -- Detelina Tocheva -- Chapter 5. The Trader's Wedding: Ritual Inflation and Money Gifts in Transylvania -- Monica Vasile -- Chapter 6. "We don't have work. We just grow a little tobacco": Household Economy and Ritual Effervescence in a Macedonian Town -- Miladina Monova -- Appendix: The "Economy and Ritual" Project and the Field Questionnaire -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 54
    ISBN: 9781782389477
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 318 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Ethnography, Theory, Experiment 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In one form or another, water participates in the making and unmaking of people's lives, practices, and stories. Contributors' detailed ethnographic work analyzes the union and mutual shaping of water and social lives. This volume discusses current ecological disturbances and engages in a world where unbounded relationalities and unsettled frames of orientation mark the lives of all, anthropologists included. Water emerges as a fluid object in more senses than one, challenging anthropologists to foreground the mutable character of their objects of study and to responsibly engage with the generative role of cultural analysis.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface -- Introduction: Waterworlds at Large -- Kirsten Hastrup and Frida Hastrup -- Chapter 1. East Anglian Fenland: Water, the Work of Imagination, and the Creation of Value -- Richard D. G. Irvine -- Chapter 2. Fluid Entitlements: Constructing and Contesting Water Allocations in Burkina Faso, West Africa -- Ben Orlove, Carla Roncoli, and Brian Dowd-Uribe -- Chapter 3. Raining in the Andes: Disrupted Seasonal and Hydrological Cycles -- Astrid B. Stensrud -- Chapter 4. Respect and Passion in a Lagoon in the South Pacific -- Cecilie Rubow -- Chapter 5. West African Waterworlds: Narratives of Absence versus Narratives of Excess -- Mette Fog Olwig and Laura Vang Rasmussen -- Chapter 6. To the Lighthouse: Making a Liveable World by the Bay of Bengal -- Frida Hastrup -- Chapter 7. Enacting Groundwaters in Tarawa, Kiribati: Searching for Facts and Articulating Concerns -- Maria Louise Bønnelykke Robertson -- Chapter 8. Mapping Urban Waters: Grounds and Figures on an Ethnographic Water Path -- Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen -- Chapter 9. Water Literacy in the Sahel: Understanding Rain and Ground Water -- Anette Reenberg -- Chapter 10. Deep Time and Shallow Waters: Configurations of an Irrigation Channel in the Andes -- Mattias Borg Rasmussen -- Chapter 11. Moral Valves and Fluid Properties: Water Regulation Mechanisms in the Bâdia of Southeastern Mauritania -- Christian Vium -- Chapter 12. Reflecting Nature: Water Beings in History and Imagination -- Veronica Strang -- Chapter 13. The North Water: Life on the Ice Edge in the High Arctic -- Kirsten Hastrup -- Notes on Contributors --
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  • 55
    ISBN: 9781782386513
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 262 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Dislocations 15
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Shortly after the book's protagonists moved into their apartment complex in Sarajevo, they, like many others, were overcome by the 1992-1995 war and the disintegration of socialist Yugoslavia More than a decade later, in post-war Bosnia and Herzegovina, they felt they were collectively stuck in a time warp where nothing seemed to be as it should be. Starting from everyday concerns, this book paints a compassionate yet critical portrait of people's sense that they were in limbo, trapped in a seemingly endless "Meantime." Ethnographically investigating yearnings for "normal lives" in the European semi-periphery, it proposes fresh analytical tools to explore how the time and place in which we are caught shape our hopes and fears.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Preface -- Introduction: [or, Towards an Anthropology of Shared Concerns] -- PART I: FIGURING 'NORMAL LIVES' -- Chapter 1. 'Normal Lives' [or, Towards an Anthropology of Yearning] -- Chapter 2. Waiting for a Bus [or, Towards an Anthropology of Gridding] -- Chapter 3. War-Time Gridding for 'Normal Lives' [or, Towards an Anthropology of Hope for the State] -- PART II: DIAGNOSING DAYTONITIS -- Chapter 4. First Symptom: 'There Is No System' [or, Towards an Anthropology of an Elusive State Effect] -- Chapter 5. Second Symptom: 'We Are Pattering in Place' [or, Towards an Anthropology of Spatiotemporal Entrapment] -- PART III: LIVING WITH DAYTONITIS -- Chapter 6. Conviviality in the Meantime [or, Towards a Critique of Dayton Non-Politics] -- Epilogue: Shovelling and Numbering for 'Normal Lives' -- References -- Index --
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  • 56
    ISBN: 9781782385639
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 310 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Food, Nutrition, and Culture 3
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Foods are changed not only by those who produce and supply them, but also by those who consume them. Analyzing food without considering changes over time and across space is less meaningful than analyzing it in a global context where tastes, lifestyles, and imaginations cross boundaries and blend with each other, challenging the idea of authenticity. A dish that originated in Beijing and is recreated in New York is not necessarily the same, because although authenticity is often claimed, the form, ingredients, or taste may have changed. The contributors of this volume have expanded the discussion of food to include its social and cultural meanings and functions, thereby using it as a way to explain a culture and its changes.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Kwang Ok Kim -- PART I: NATIONAL/LOCAL FOOD IN THE RE(MAKING) -- Chapter 1. Dining Elegance and Authenticity: Archaeology of Royal Court Cuisine in Korea -- Okpyo Moon -- Chapter 2. History and Politics of National Cuisine: Malaysia and Taiwan -- Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao and Khay-Thiong Lim -- Chapter 3. Wudang Daoist Tea Culture -- Jean DeBernardi -- Chapter 4. Rice Cuisine and Cultural Practice in Contemporary Korean Dietary Life -- Kwang Ok Kim -- PART II: FOOD PRACTICE ACROSS CULTURAL BOUNDARY -- Chapter 5. Noodle Odyssey: East Asia and Beyond -- Kyung-Koo Han -- Chapter 6. Cultural Nostalgia and Global Imagination: Japanese Cuisine in Taiwan -- David Y. H. Wu -- Chapter 7. The Visible and the Invisible: Intimate Engagements with Russia's Culinary East -- Melissa L. Caldwell -- Chapter 8. Experiencing the "West" through the "East" in the Margins of Europe: Chinese Food Consumption Practices in Post-socialist Bulgaria -- Yuson Jung -- Chapter 9. Exoticizing the Familiar, Domesticating the Foreign: Ethnic Food Restaurants in Korea -- Sangmee Bak -- Chapter 10. Serving Ambiguity: Class and Classification in Thai Food at Home and Abroad -- Michael Herzfeld -- PART III: HEALTH, SAFETY, AND FOOD CONSUMPTION -- Chapter 11. Well-being Discourse and Chinese Food in Korean Society -- Young-Kyun Yang -- Chapter 12. The Social Life of American Crayfish in Asia -- Sidney C. H. Cheung -- Chapter 13. Eating Green: Ecological Food Consumption in Urban China -- Jakob A. Klein -- Chapter 14. From Food Poisoning to Poisonous Food: The Spectrum of Food-Safety Problems in Contemporary China -- Yunxiang Yan -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 57
    ISBN: 9781782386476
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 326 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: EASA Series 26
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Pagan and Native Faith movements have sprung up across Europe in recent decades, yet little has been published about them compared with their British and American counterparts. Though all such movements valorize human relationships with nature and embrace polytheistic cosmologies, practitioners' beliefs, practices, goals, and agendas are diverse. Often side by side are groups trying to reconstruct ancient religions motivated by ethnonationalism-especially in post-Soviet societies-and others attracted by imported traditions, such as Wicca, Druidry, Goddess Spirituality, and Core Shamanism. Drawing on ethnographic cases, contributors explore the interplay of neo-nationalistic and neo-colonialist impulses in contemporary Paganism, showing how these impulses play out, intersect, collide, and transform.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: Context is Everything: Plurality and Paradox in Contemporary European Paganisms -- Kathryn Rountree -- Chapter 1. Sami Neo-shamanism in Norway: Colonial Grounds, Ethnic Revival and Pagan Pathways -- Siv Ellen Kraft -- Chapter 2. It's Not Easy Being Apolitical: Reconstruction and Eclecticism in Danish Asatro -- Matthew H. Amster -- Chapter 3. Modern Heathenism in Sweden: A Case Study in the Creation of a Traditional Religion -- Fredrik Gregorius -- Chapter 4. The Brotherhood of Wolves, Czech Republic: From Ásatrú to Primitivism -- Kamila Velkoborská -- Chapter 5. Soviet-era Discourse and Siberian Shamanic Revivalism: How Area Spirits Speak through Academia -- Eleanor Peers -- Chapter 6. In Search of Genuine Religion: The Contemporary Estonian MaausulisedMovement and Nationalist Discourse -- Ergo-Hart Västrik -- Chapter 7. Emerging Identity Marketsof Contemporary Pagan Ideologies in Hungary -- Tamás Szilágyi -- Chapter 8. Hot, Strange, Völkish, Cosmopolitan: Native Faith and Neopagan Witchcraft in Berlin's Changing Urban Context -- Victoria Hegner -- Chapter 9. Paganism in Ireland: Syncretic Processes, Identity and a Sense of Place -- Jenny Butler -- Chapter 10. On the Sticks and Stones of the Greencraft Temple in Flanders: Balancing Global and Local Heritage in Wicca -- Léon van Gulik -- Chapter 11. Iberian Paganism: Goddess Spirituality in Spain and Portugal and the Quest for Authenticity -- Anna Fedele -- Chapter 12. Bellisama and Aradia: Paganism Re-emerges in Italy -- Francesca Ciancimino Howell -- Chapter 13. Authenticity and Invention in the Quest for a Modern Maltese Paganism -- Kathryn Rountree -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 58
    ISBN: 9781782387374
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 256 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Ethnography, Theory, Experiment 2
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Built around key events, from the eviction of a self-managed social centre in Copenhagen in 2007 to the Climate Summit protests in 2009, this book contributes to anthropological literature on contemporary Euro-American politics foreshadowing recent waves of public dissent. Stine Krøijer explores political forms among left radical and anarchist activists in Northern Europe focusing on how forms of action engender time. Drawing on anthropological literature from both Scandinavia and the Amazon, this ethnography recasts theoretical concerns about body politics, political intentionality, aesthetics, and time.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. 'Other Worlds Are Possible': A Political Cosmology of Capitalism -- A DUMPSTER DIVE. -- Chapter 2. Becoming Absorbed: Youth and Interstices of Active Time in Ungdomshuset -- NAMING AND RAISING A CHILD -- Chapter 3. 'A Common Choreography of Action': Preparations and Intentions. -- Chapter 4. 'We Are Humans, What Are You?': Securitization, Unpredictability and Enemy-Becoming -- A STREET DANCE IN HYSKENSTRÆDE -- Chapter 5. 'I Used To Run As The Black Bloc': Style and Perspectivist Time in Protests and Direct Actions -- Conclusion: The Collective Body as a Theory of Politics -- References -- Index --
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  • 59
    ISBN: 9781782388906
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 186 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Events are "generative moments" in at least three senses: events are created by and condense larger-scale social structures; as moments, they spark and give rise to new social processes; in themselves, events may also serve to analyze social situations and relationships. Based on ethnographic studies from around the world-varying from rituals and meetings over protests and conflicts to natural disasters and management-this volume analyzes generative moments through events that hold the key to understanding larger social situations. These events-including the Ashura ritual in Bahrain, social cleavages in South Africa, a Buddhist cave in Nepal, drought in Burkina Faso, an earthquake in Pakistan, the cartoon crisis in Denmark, corporate management at Bang & Olufsen, protest meetings in Europe, and flooding and urban citizenship in Mozambique-are not simply destructive disasters, crises, and conflicts, but also generative and constitutive of the social.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: In the Event-toward an Anthropology of Generic Moments -- Bruce Kapferer -- Chapter 1. 'Ashura in Bahrain: Analyses of an Analytical Event -- Thomas Fibiger -- Chapter 2. 'Burying the ANC': Post-apartheid Ambiguities at the University of Limpopo, South Africa -- Bjarke Oxlund -- Chapter 3. A Topographic Event: A Buddhist Lama's Perception of a Pilgrimage Cave -- Jesper Oestergaard -- Chapter 4. The Outburst: Climate Change, Gender Relations, and Situational Analysis -- Jonas Østergaard Nielsen -- Chapter 5. Events and Effects: Intensive Transnationalism among Pakistanis in Denmark -- Mikkel Rytter -- Chapter 6. The Cartoon Controversy: Creating Muslims in a Danish Setting -- Anja Kublitz -- Chapter 7. Values at Work: Ambivalent Situations and Human Resource Embarrassment -- Jakob Krause-Jensen -- Chapter 8. Figurations of the Future: On the Form and Temporality of Protests among Left Radical Activists in Europe -- Stine Krøijer -- Chapter 9. Mimesis of the State: From Natural Disaster to Urban Citizenship on the Outskirts of Maputo, Mozambique -- Morten Nielsen -- About the Editors -- Index --
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  • 60
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782387848
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 186 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Dislocations 16
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: After the collapse of the USSR, Kyrgyzstan chose a path of economic and political liberalization. Only a few years later, however, the country ceased producing anything of worth and developed a dependence on the outside world, particularly on international aid. Its principal industry, sheep breeding, was decimated by reforms suggested by international institutions providing assistance. Virtually annihilated by privatization of the economy and deserted by Moscow, the Kyrgyz have turned this economic "opening up" into a subtle strategy to capture all manner of resources from abroad. In this study, the author describes the encounters, sometimes comical and tinged with incomprehension, between the local population and the well-meaning foreigners who came to reform them.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements -- Map of Central Asia -- Map of Kyrgyzstan -- Introduction: Someone Ate All Our Sheep -- -- On the Kyrgyz Highlands -- In Search of a Baseline -- Looking Back on a Soviet Economy of Intensive Livestock Farming -- From Kolkhoz to Village -- The Anthropologist in the Face of Social Change -- Some Local Authority Figures -- -- The Former Kolkhoz Chairman: The Bashkarma -- The New Official Local Authority: The Ayil Okmotu -- The "Biznesman": Economic Power -- The Shepherd: A Prestigious but Powerless Figure -- The Moldo or the Affirmation of Religious Authority -- -- The Rise of NGOs and the Development of Private Enterprise -- Logics of Power: Appropriation, Plunder, and Capture of Resources -- -- Chapter 1. Manas, Unesco, and the Kyrgyz Fabula -- -- Manas: Political Uses of a Traditional Oral Epic -- -- Indigenization and Nationalization of the Epic -- Manas 1000: Political Ritual of the New Kyrgyz Identity -- Manas Gumbez: A National Heritage Site -- Manas Ayili and the Building of an International Image -- -- UNESCO: Global Entrepreneur of the Kyrgyz National Imaginary -- Polysemous Perceptions of the Creation of the New National Imaginary -- Democracy, Decentralization, Tribal Identity, and Minorities -- Affirmation of Ethnic Identity in the South of the Country -- Enhancing "Tribal" Identity in the North -- Manas in a Context of Globalization -- -- Chapter 2. Kyrgyzstan and Good Governance Experts -- -- The Ideology of Good Governance: Minimal Government, Private Enterprise and Civil Society -- The UNPD: Decline of the State, Promotion of Local and Traditional Political Practices -- From an Economic Planning Culture to a Project Culture -- Promoting Democracy -- The Development of Local Kyrgyz NGOs -- Electoral Assistance: Technical Aid or Political Interference -- -- Chapter 3. Elections and the Promotion of Democracy -- -- Ethnography of an Election -- IFES and Elections: Democracy@large -- Ethnography of an American Political Foundation Training Session -- Training and Strategy of Influence -- -- Eligibility: The Demokrat and Kyrgyzness -- -- -- Chapter 4. The Fall of the Common House -- -- The Soviet Regime or the Ambition to Establish Absolute Control over Human Flows -- Askar Akayev's Common House Ideology and Emigration of the Russian-Speaking Population -- Rural Exodus and Urban Sprawl -- From Migration to Increased Kyrgyz Mobility -- The Russian Perspective: Gastarbeiter -- The Political Weight of Remittances in Kyrgyzstan -- -- Chapter 5. The Bazaar: Symbol of a Society of Traders -- -- The Bazaar: The Return to a Natural Economic Order? -- The "Bazarkoms": New Social Figures -- Property and Political Protection: The Dordoy Bazaar and Askar Salymbekov -- -- From Dordoy Bazar to Dordoy Associatsia: The Transmission of Capital -- Patronage and Political Clientele -- Redistribution and Social Legitimacy -- Soccer and Kok-boru -- Giving to the Dead and to God: Monuments and Jubilees -- -- The Changing Face of the Bazaar: The Labor Market on Avenue Maladoja Guardia -- -- Chapter 6. Civil Society and Election Monitoring -- -- Koalitsia and the National Democratic Institute -- Baisalov: Portrait of a Democracy Promotion Icon -- Koalitsia and the ENEMO Transnational Network -- Intellectual Influences: Non-Violent Movements -- Koalitsia's Hour of Glory: The Tulip Revolution -- Participative Observation in an Election Mission -- The Election Mission: A Multi-camp Caravan -- The Deployment of Observers -- Return to the Capital and Debriefing -- The Press Conference -- Cocktail Hour: The Communion Ritual of Democracy Promoters -- Communion of Contentious Actors: Opposition Coalition, Koalitsia, and Kel-Kel -- -- Chapter 7. The Transnationalization of Politics -- -- Anthropology of a Fraudulent Election -- Electoral Observation and Local Dynamics -- A Changing Political Personnel: From Appointees to Elected Officials -- Becoming a Deputat: An Exemplary Political Battle -- Political Transhumance, Opposition, Marginalization, and Exile -- Political Practices and Regional Factionalism -- The New Role of the President and Appointed Political Personnel -- From Communism to Keminism -- From Keminism to Teyitism -- The Political Change in 2005: Revolution, Overthrow, or Coup? -- -- Conclusion: The Kyrgyz Laboratory and the Global Politics -- Afterword: From the Kyrgyz Fabula to the Ethnic Apocalypse? -- Appendix I: Kyrgyz Republic Timeline -- Appendix II: Census of Kyrgyzstan Population -- Index --
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  • 61
    ISBN: 9781782382393
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 288 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Integration and Conflict Studies 7
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Throughout its history the concept of "Uzbekness," or more generally of a Turkic-speaking sedentary population, has continuously attracted members of other groups to join, as being Uzbek promises opportunities to enlarge ones social network. Accession is comparatively easy, as Uzbekness is grounded in a cultural model of territoriality, rather than genealogy, as the basis for social attachments. It acknowledges regional variation and the possibility of membership by voluntary decision. Therefore, the boundaries of being Uzbek vary almost by definition, incorporating elements of local languages, cultural patterns and social organization. This book combines an historical analysis with thorough ethnographic field research, looking at differences in the conceptualization of group boundaries and the social practices they entail. It does so by analysing decision-making processes by Uzbeks on the individual as well as cognitive level and the political configurations that surround them.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Maps, Figures and Tables -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- -- Introduction -- -- Chapter 1. A Historical Sketch of the Uzbeks: From Nomadic Conquerors to Post-socialist Farmers -- Chapter 2. A Central Asian Melting Pot: The Oasis of Bukhara -- Chapter 3. Desperation at the End of the World?The Oasis of Khorezm -- Chapter 4. Conflict Inevitable?The Ferghana Valley -- Chapter 5. Birthplace of a National Hero: The Oasis of Sharisabz -- -- Conclusion -- -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 62
    ISBN: 9781782382614
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 392 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Space and Place 11
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Mythologies and narratives of victimization pervade contemporary Croatia, set against the backdrop of militarized notions of masculinity and the political mobilization of religion and nationhood. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork in rural Dalmatia in the Croatian-Bosnian border region, this book provides a unique account of the politics of ambiguous Europeanness from the perspective of those living at Europe's margins. Examining phenomena such as Marian apparitions, a historic knights tournament, the symbolic re-signification of a massacre site, and the desolate social situation of Croatian war veterans, Narrating Victimhood traces the complex mechanisms of political radicalization in a post-war scenario. This book provides a new perspective for understanding the ongoing processes of transformation in Southeastern Europe and the Balkans.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on the Text -- -- Introduction -- -- Chapter 1. (In-)Subordination at the Margins of Europe -- Chapter 2. Marian Devotion in Times of War -- Chapter 3. Re-Visions of History through Landscape -- Chapter 4. Of War Heroes, Martyrs, and Invalids -- Chapter 5. Mobilising Local Reserves -- -- Concluding Remarks -- -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 63
    ISBN: 9781782382775
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 194 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The provocative title of this book is deliberately and challengingly universalist, matching the theoretically experimental essays, where contributors try different ideas to answer distinct concerns regarding cosmopolitanism. Leading anthropologists explore what cosmopolitanism means in the context of everyday life, variously viewing it as an aspect of kindness and empathy, as tolerance, hospitality and openness, and as a defining feature of pan-human individuality. The chapters thus advance an existential critique of abstract globalization discourse. The book enriches interdisciplinary debates about hitherto neglected aspects of contemporary cosmopolitanism as a political and moral project, examining the form of its lived effects and offering new ideas and case studies to work with.
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface -- -- Introduction: We the Cosmopolitans: Framing the Debate -- Lisette Josephides -- -- Chapter 1. Citizens of Everything: The Aporetics of Cosmopolitanism -- Ronald Stade -- -- Chapter 2. The Capacities of Anyone: Accommodating the Universal Human Subject as Value and in Space -- Nigel Rapport -- -- Chapter 3. Cosmopolitan Morality in the British Immigration and Asylum System -- Alexandra Hall -- -- Chapter 4. Experiences of Pain: A Gateway to Cosmopolitan Subjectivity? -- Anne Sigfrid Gronseth -- -- Chapter 5. Cosmopolitanism as Welcoming the Other/Imperilling the Self: Ethics and Early Encounters between Lyons Missionaries and West African Rulers Prior to Colonial Rule -- Marc Schiltz -- -- Chapter 6. The Cartoon Controversy and the Possibility of Cosmopolitanism -- Thomas Hylland Eriksen -- -- Conclusion -- Alexandra Hall -- -- Notes on contributors --
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  • 64
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782382973
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 264 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: EASA Series 24
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The highland region of the republic of Georgia, one of the former Soviet Socialist Republics, has long been legendary for its beauty. It is often assumed that the state has only made partial inroads into this region, and is mostly perceived as alien. Taking a fresh look at the Georgian highlands allows the author to consider perennial questions of citizenship, belonging, and mobility in a context that has otherwise been known only for its folkloric dimensions. Scrutinizing forms of identification with the state at its margins, as well as local encounters with the erratic Soviet and post-Soviet state, the author argues that citizenship is both a sought-after means of entitlement and a way of guarding against the state. This book not only challenges theories in the study of citizenship but also the axioms of integration in Western social sciences in general.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- List of Maps -- List of Tables -- Acknowledgements -- Note on Transcription -- -- Introduction -- -- Chapter 1. A Mobile Field -- Chapter 2. Hidden Treasures in the Mountains and a State that Comes and Goes -- Chapter 3. Reborn Citizens in a Post- Soviet Landscape -- Chapter 4. Three Ways to Be a State -- Chapter 5. Triple Winning and Simple Losing -- -- Conclusion -- -- Appendix -- -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 65
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782383512
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 256 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Pacific Perspectives: Studies of the European Society for Oceanists 2
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The Pacific region presents a huge diversity of cultural forms, which have fuelled some of the most challenging ethnographic work undertaken in the discipline. But this challenge has come at a cost. Culture, often reconfigured as 'custom', has often served to trap the people of the Pacific in the past of cultural reproduction, where everything is what it has always been, or worse-outdated, outmoded and destined for modernization. Pacific Futures asks how our understanding of social life in the Pacific would be different if we approached it from the perspective of the futures which Pacific people dream of, predict or struggle to achieve, not the reproduction of cultural tradition. From Christianity to gambling, marriage to cargo cult, military coups to reflections on childhood fishing trips, the contributors to this volume show how Pacific people are actively shaping their lives with the future in mind.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: Pacific Futures, Methodological Challenges -- Will Rollason -- -- Chapter 1. Imagining the Future: An Existential and Practical Activity -- Lisette Josephides -- -- Chapter 2. The Hanging of Buliga: A History of the Future in the Louisiade Archipelago, PNG -- Will Rollason -- -- Chapter 3. Why the Future is Selfish and Could Kill: Contraception and the Future of Paama -- Craig Lind -- -- Chapter 4. Gambling Futures: Playing the Imminent in Highland Papua New Guinea -- Anthony Pickles -- -- Chapter 5. The Future of Christian Critique: Lost Tribes Discourses in Papua New Guinean Publics -- Courtney Handman -- -- Chapter 6. A Cursed Past and a Prosperous Future in Vanuatu: a Comparison of Different Conceptions of Self and Healing -- Annelin Eriksen -- -- Chapter 7. Chiefs for the Future? Roles of Traditional Titleholders in the Cook Islands -- Arno Pascht -- -- Chapter 8. A Coup-Less Future for Fiji? Between Rhetoric and Political Reality -- Dominik Schieder -- -- Chapter 9. The Devouring of the Placenta: The Crisscrossing and Confluence of Cosmological, Geomorphological, Ecological, and Economic Cycles of Destruction and Repair in Ruatoria, Aotearoa/New Zealand -- Dave Robinson -- -- Chapter 10. The Human Face of Climate Change: Notes from Rotuma and Tuvalu -- Vilsoni Hereniko -- -- List of Contributors --
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  • 66
    ISBN: 9781782383765
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 224 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Metaphor, as an act of human fancy, combines ideas in improbable ways to sharpen meanings of life and experience. Theoretically, this arises from an association between a sign-for example, a cattle car-and its referent, the Holocaust. These "sign-vehicles" serve as modes of semiotic transportation through conceptual space. Likewise, on-the-ground vehicles can be rich metaphors for the moral imagination. Following on this insight, Vehicles presents a collection of ethnographic essays on the metaphoric significance of vehicles in different cultures. Analyses include canoes in Papua New Guinea, pedestrians and airplanes in North America, lowriders among Mexican-Americans, and cars in contemporary China, Japan, and Eastern Europe, as well as among African-Americans in the South. Vehicles not only "carry people around," but also "carry" how they are understood in relation to the dynamics of culture, politics and history.
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  • 67
    ISBN: 9781782382874
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 220 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Integration and Conflict Studies 10
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Friendship, descent and alliance are basic forms of relatedness that have received unequal attention in social anthropology. Offering new insights into the ways in which friendship is conceptualized and realized in various sub-Saharan African settings, the contributions to this volume depart from the recent tendency to study friendship in isolation from kinship. In drawing attention to the complexity of the interactions between these two kinds of social relationships, the book suggests that analyses of friendship in Western societies would also benefit from research that explores more systematically friendship in conjunction with kinship.
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Günther Schlee -- -- Acknowledgements -- -- Introduction -- Martine Guichard -- -- Part I. Friendship, Kinship and Age -- -- Chapter 1. Where Are Other People's Friends Hiding? Reflections on Anthropological Studies of Friendship -- Martine Guichard -- -- Chapter 2. Comradeship and the Transformation of Alliance Theory among the Maasai: Shifting the Focus from Descent to Peer-Group Loyalty -- Paul Spencer -- -- Part II. Friendship and Ethnicity -- -- Chapter 3. Friendship Networks in Southwestern Ethiopia -- Wolde Gossa Tadesse and Martine Guichard -- -- Chapter 4. Friendship and Spiritual Parenthood among the Moose and the Fulbe in Burkina Faso -- Mark Breusers -- -- Chapter 5. Labour Migration and Moral Dimensions of Interethnic Friendships: The Case of Young Gold Miners in Benin (West Africa) -- Tilo Grätz -- -- Part III. Friendship, Politics and Urbanity -- -- Chapter 6. Friendship and Kinship among Merchants and Veterans in Mali -- Richard L. Warms -- -- Chapter 7. 'Down-to-Earth': Friendship and a National Elite Circle in Botswana -- Richard Werbner -- -- Chapter 8. Negotiating Friendship and Kinship in a Context of Violence: The Case of the Tuareg during the Upheaval in Mali from 1990 to 1996 -- Georg Klute -- -- Afterword: Friendship in a World of Force and Power -- Stephen P. Reyna -- -- Bibliography -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 68
    ISBN: 9781782382638
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 292 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Integration and Conflict Studies 8
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Most of the Muslim societies of the world have entered a demographic transition from high to low fertility, and this process is accompanied by an increase in youth vis-à-vis other age groups. Political scientists and historians have debated whether such a "youth bulge" increases the potential for conflict or whether it represents a chance to accumulate wealth and push forward social and technological developments. This book introduces the discussion about youth bulge into social anthropology using Tajikistan, a post-Soviet country that experienced civil war in the 1990s, which is in the middle of such a demographic transition. Sophie Roche develops a social anthropological approach to analyze demographic and political dynamics, and suggests a new way of thinking about social change in youth bulge societies.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Maps, Figures and Tables -- -- Foreword: The Construction of Life Phases and Some Facts of Life -- Günther Schlee -- -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on Transliteration and Usage -- -- Introduction: Youth (Bulge) and Conflict -- -- Chapter 1. Placing the Field Sites in Their Context – A Demographic History -- Chapter 2. 'Why Didn't You Take a Side?' –The Emergence of Youth Categories, Institutions and Groups -- Chapter 3. 'Siblings are as Different as the Five Fingers of a Hand' – Developmental Cycle of Domestic Groups and Siblingship -- Chapter 4. 'The Gift of Youth' – Workers, Religious Actors and Migrants -- Chapter 5. 'The only Thing in Life that Makes you Feel like a King' – Marriage as an Indicator of Social and Demographic Changes -- Chapter 6. 'Youth are our Future' – The State's Youth Categories Challenged by Youth -- -- Conclusion: The Dynamics of Youth Bulge as a Question of Domestication -- -- Appendix -- Glossary of Selected Terms -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 69
    ISBN: 9781782385387
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 216 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The 1970s saw the Aboriginal people of Australia struggle for recognition of their postcolonial rights. Rural communities, where large Aboriginal populations lived, were provoked as a consequence of social fragmentation, unparalleled unemployment, and other major economic and political changes. The ensuing riots, protests, and law-and-order campaigns in New South Wales captured the tense relations that existed between indigenous people, the police, and the criminal justice system. In Protests, Land Rights, and Riots, Barry Morris shows how neoliberal policies in Australia targeted those who were least integrated socially and culturally, and who enjoyed fewer legitimate economic opportunities. Amidst intense political debate, struggle, and conflict, new forces were unleashed as a post-settler colonial state grappled with its past. Morris provides a social analysis of the ensuing effects of neoliberal policy and the way indigenous rights were subsequently undermined by this emerging new political orthodoxy in the 1990s.  
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Albert Bates -- Acknowledgments -- Map -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Crisis of identity: Aboriginal politics, the media and the law -- -- The Brewarrina riot: a summary -- The media riot -- The trial riot -- Royal Commission and Indigenising crime -- -- Chapter 2. Neoliberalism and Indigenous rights in New South Wales -- -- The new political order -- Repealing the Aboriginal Land Rights Act -- A post-bureaucratic public service -- Self-sufficiency, not dependency -- The Perkins Report - strategic retreat -- Removing land rights from the postcolonial landscape -- -- Chapter 3. Firm government: state of siege -- -- Law and order in New South Wales -- Punishing crime -- Law and order in north-western New South Wales -- State of siege -- -- Chapter 4. Postcolonial fantasy and anxiety in the North West -- -- The North West as contested space -- Policing cultural borderlands -- Postcolonial subjects -- Contingent jurisprudence -- -- Chapter 5. Police testimony and the Brewarrina riot trial -- Co-authored with Kerry Zubrinich -- -- A prosecution account of the riot -- What is a riot? -- Power relations in the courtroom -- -- Chapter 6. Aborigines behaving badly: legal realism and paternalism -- -- The evidentiary effect of video -- Bodies in pain and paternalism -- Docile bodies and Aborigines behaving badly -- Legal realism and paternalism -- -- Abbreviations -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 70
    ISBN: 9781782383437
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 336 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Pacific Perspectives: Studies of the European Society for Oceanists 1
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: In 1908, Arthur Maurice Hocart and William Halse Rivers Rivers conducted fieldwork in the Solomon Islands and elsewhere in Island Melanesia that served as the turning point in the development of modern anthropology. The work of these two anthropological pioneers on the small island of Simbo brought about the development of participant observation as a methodological hallmark of social anthropology. This would have implications for Rivers' later work in psychiatry and psychology, and Hocart's work as a comparativist, for which both would largely be remembered despite the novelty of that independent fieldwork on remote Pacific islands in the early years of the 20th Century. Contributors to this volume-who have all carried out fieldwork in those Melanesian locations where Hocart and Rivers worked-give a critical examination of the research that took place in 1908, situating those efforts in the broadest possible contexts of colonial history, imperialism, the history of ideas and scholarly practice within and beyond anthropology.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of illustrations -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Contributors -- -- Introduction: The Ethnographic Experiment in Island Melanesia -- Edvard Hviding and Cato Berg -- -- Chapter 1. Acknowledging Ancestors: The Vexations of Representation -- Christine Dureau -- -- Chapter 2. Across the New Georgia Group: A.M. Hocart's Fieldwork as Inter-Island Practice -- Edvard Hviding -- -- Chapter 3. The Genealogical Method: Vella Lavella Reconsidered -- Cato Berg -- -- Chapter 4. Rivers and the Study of Kinship in Ambrym: Mother Right and Father Right Revisited -- Knut M. Rio and Annelin Eriksen -- -- Chapter 5. House Upon Pacific Sand: W.H.R. Rivers and his 1908 Ethnographic 'Survey Work' -- Thorgeir S. Kolshus -- -- Chapter 6. Colonialism as Shell-Shock: W.H.R. Rivers's Explanations for Depopulation in Melanesia -- Tim Bayliss-Smith -- -- Chapter 7. A Vanishing People or a Vanishing Discourse? W.H.R. Rivers's 'Psychological Factor' and Depopulation in the Solomon Islands and the New Hebrides -- Judith A. Bennett -- -- Chapter 8. Objects and Photographs from the Percy Sladen Trust Expedition -- Tim Thomas -- -- Appendix I: Unpublished reports by W.H.R. Rivers to the Trustees of the Percy Sladen Memorial Trust Fund -- Transcribed by Tim Bayliss-Smith -- -- Appendix II: Materials in archives from the 1908 fieldwork in Island Melanesia -- Cato Berg -- -- Appendix III: Planning the Expedition: Letters Written before the Fieldwork Began --
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  • 71
    ISBN: 9781782383642
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 306 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Dislocations 13
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Based on long-term fieldwork, six vivid ethnographies from Colombia, India, Poland, Spain and the southern and northern U.S. address the dwindling importance of labor throughout the world. The contributors to this volume highlight the growing disconnect between labor struggles and the advancement of the greater common good, a phenomenon that has grown since the 1980s. The collection illustrates the defeat and unmaking of particular working classes, and it develops a comparative perspective on the uneven consequences of and reactions to this worldwide project. In Blood and Fire charts a course within global anthropology to address the widespread precariousness and the prevalence of insecure and informal labor in the twenty-first century.
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Toward a Global Anthropology of Labor -- August Carbonella and Sharryn Kasmir -- Chapter 1. Fragmented Solidarity: Political Violence and Neoliberalism in Colombia -- Lesley Gill -- Chapter 2. Labor in Place/Capitalism in Space: The Making and Unmaking of a Local Working Class on Maine's "Paper Plantation" -- August Carbonella -- Chapter 3. Flexible Labor/Flexible Housing: The Rescaling of Mumbai into a Global Financial Center and the -- Fate of its Working Class -- Judy Whitehead -- Chapter 4. Structures without Soul and Immediate Struggles: Rethinking Militant Particularism in Contemporary Spain -- Susana Narotzky -- Chapter 5. The Saturn Automobile Plant and the Long Dispossession of US Autoworkers -- Sharryn Kasmir -- Chapter 6. "Worthless Poles" and Other Dispossessions: Toward an Anthropology of Labor in Post-Communist Central and Eastern Europe -- Don Kalb -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 72
    ISBN: 9781782384083
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 288 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: If memory was simply about past events, public authorities would never put their ever-shrinking budgets at its service. Rather, memory is actually about the present moment, as Pierre Nora puts it: "Through the past, we venerate above all ourselves." This book examines how collective memory and material culture are used to support present political and ideological needs in contemporary society. Using the memorialization of the Troubles in contemporary Northern Ireland as a case study, this book investigates how non-state, often proscribed, organizations have filled a societal vacuum in the creation of public memorials. In particular, these groups have sifted through the past to propose "official" collective narratives of national identification, historical legitimation, and moral justifications for violence.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Foreword by Hastings Donnan -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction: Memorials as Silent Extras or Scripted Actors? -- -- Book Outline -- -- Chapter 1. Collective Memory and the Politics of Memorialisation: a Theoretical Overview -- -- Memory in the Social World: Collectiveness versus Individuality -- The Shaping of Collective Memory: Present versus Past -- Lieux de Mémoireas Conveyors of Social Memory -- Politicised Remembering: the Nexus between Memory and Power -- -- The Politics of War Memory and Commemoration -- -- The Memory Makers and the Projection of Narratives about the Past -- Methodological Framework -- -- Database of Memorials -- Survey of Local Population -- Interviews -- Commemorations -- -- -- Chapter 2. The Armalite and the Paintbrush: a Brief History of Memorialization of the Troubles in Northern Ireland -- -- Commemorating during the Troubles -- -- Funerals and Communal Burials -- Annual Commemorations -- -- The Mural Painting Tradition in Northern Ireland -- -- The Early Years -- Armed Struggle and Party-political Murals -- Post-ceasefire and Peace Process Murals -- -- The 1998 Agreement and the 'Boom' of Permanent Memorialization -- -- Post-Agreement Murals -- -- Permanent Memorials -- -- Memorials to Paramilitary Combatants -- Memorials to Civilian Casualties -- Memorials to Security Forces -- Memorials in Government Buildings, Party Offices, Workplaces and Churches -- Commemorative Banners and Memorial Bands -- Memorial Publications, Commemorative Pamphlets and Oral History Projects -- Memorial Prizes, Awards and Trophies -- -- Post-conflict Commemorations -- Peace or Cross-community Memorials -- -- Chapter 3. The 'Landscape of Memorialization' in Belfast: Spatial and Temporal Reflections -- -- 'New' Cultural Geography and the Concept of Landscape as 'Text' -- Belfast and the Ethnicization of Space -- The Spatial Dimension of Memorialization -- -- Memorials as Territorial Markers -- Memorials as Aide-Mémoires -- Memorials as Sacred Places -- -- The Temporal Dimension of Memorialization -- -- Memorials: End of the War or Continuation through Different Means? -- Memorials: still here or never again? -- Memorials as Identity 'Crutches' -- -- -- Chapter 4. The 'Memory Makers' and the Projection of Narratives of the Troubles -- -- Individual 'Stories' versus the Collective 'History' of the Troubles: the Power of the Narrative -- Republican and Loyalist Memorials: the Projection of Opposing Narratives of The Troubles -- -- Two Imagined Communities: Creating a Symbolic National Identification -- -- Cherry-picking from History: Opposing Versions of a Shared Past -- -- Ancestries of Resistance: Manufacturing Genealogies -- Forgetting to Remember: Social Amnesia and Euphemization -- Delegitimizing the Enemy: Demonization and Stigmatization -- -- Talkative Dead Bodies: the Politics of Commemorations -- -- Chapter 5. The Clonard Martyrs Memorial Garden: Constructing a Dominant Republican Narrative -- -- The 1998 Agreement and the Prisoners' 'Issue': the Formation of Ex-prisoners' Groups -- -- The Greater Clonard Ex-Prisoners' Association -- -- Enlisting the 'Unsung Heroes' in the Republican Narrative: Local History and Memorial Projects -- The Clonard Martyrs Memorial GardeN -- -- Planning Permission and Relationship with Local Authorities -- Funding, Building Materials and Manpower -- -- Construction of a Successful Dominant Narrative: Iconography, Language and Historical Selection -- Perpetuating Collective Memory: Periodic cCommemorations in Clonard -- -- Chapter 6. The IRSP/INLA Teach Na Fáilte Memorial Committee: Constructing a Sectional Republican Narrative -- -- The IRSP/INLA Teach Na Fáilte Memorial Committee -- Reclaiming a Place in History for the INLA: the 1981 Hunger Strike -- Advancing a Sectional Narrative of the Troubles: the Belfast Teach Na Fáilte's Memorial Programme -- -- Unveiling ceremonies -- -- Provisional Republican and Republican Socialist Commemorations -- Opposing the Dominant Republican Narrative: Post-1998 Republican Socialist Rhetoric -- -- Chapter 7. The 1913 UVF and the Myth of the Somme: Constructing a Loyalist 'Golden Age' -- -- 'Lest We Forget': Loyalist Landscape of Memorialization -- 'From the Battlefields of the Somme to the Barricades of the Shankill': Borrowing Legitimacy -- -- Mainstream Unionism, Republicanism and the Modern UVF Narrative -- -- Disraeli Street: an Iconic Cluster of Memory -- -- Loyalist Commemorations in Memory of Paramilitary Casualties -- -- Changing with the History Tune: the Evolution of the UVF Narrative -- -- Chapter 8. The UDA Sandy Row Memorial Garden: Attempting a Narrative of Symbolic Accretion -- -- 'You Are now Entering Loyalist Sandy Row' -- Tiptoeing through History in Search of Illustrious 'Forefathers' -- The Sandy Row Memorial Garden: Attempting to Appropriate the Myth of the Somme -- -- Lay Out and Iconography -- -- Role of Families in the Memorial Process -- Remembrance Day -- 'What the World Needs now Is Love, Sweet love': 2007 UDA Remembrance Sunday -- 'Awakening the Sleeping Giant': Macro and Micropolitics at Commemorations -- -- Chapter 9. Dissecting Consensus: Memory Receivers and the Narrative's 'Hidden Transcript' -- -- Paramilitary Groups and Local Communities: a Complex Relationship -- Coexisting in Ambivalence: Memorials and Local Residents -- -- Consultation and 'Ownership' -- Cohabiting the Same Space -- -- Reasons behind Memorialization -- -- Social Memory -- Territorialization -- Historical Change -- Politico-ideological Exercise -- -- -- Chapter 10. The Memory of the Dead: Seeking Common Ground? -- -- At Last, a Common Ground in Northern Ireland? -- -- Appendix A: List of Memorials -- Appendix B: Emblems and Flags -- Bibliography -- Index --
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  • 73
    ISBN: 9781782382935
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 348 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: CEDLA Latin America Studies 103
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Willem Assies died in 2010 at the age of 55. The various stages of his career as a political anthropologist of Latin American illustrate how astute a researcher he was. He had a keen eye for the contradictions he observed during his fieldwork but also enjoyed theoretical debate. A distrust of power led him not only to attempt to understand "people without voice" but to work alongside them so they could discover and find their own voice. Willem Assies explored the messy, often untidy daily lives of people, with their inconsistencies, irrationalities, and passions, but also with their hopes, sense of beauty, solidarity, and quest for dignity. This collection brings together some of Willem Assies's best, most fascinating, and still highly relevant writings.
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Geert Banck -- -- Acknowledgements -- List of Contributors -- -- Introduction -- Gemma van der Haar, Salvador Martí i Puig, Ton Salman -- -- PART I: SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN LATIN AMERICA -- -- Introduction -- Geert Banck -- -- Chapter 1. Of Structured Moves and Moving Structures: An Overview of Theoretical Perspectives on Social Movements -- Chapter 2. Urban Social Movements, Democratization and Democracy in Brazil -- -- PART II: AGRARIAN ISSUES -- -- Introduction -- Cristobal Kay -- -- Chapter 3. The Agrarian Question in Peru: Some Observations on the Roads of Capital -- Chapter 4. From Rubber Estate to Simple Commodity Production: Agrarian Struggles in the Northern Bolivian Amazon -- -- PART III: INDIGENOUS (LAND) RIGHTS -- -- Introduction -- André Hoekema -- -- Chapter 5. Self-Determination and the "New Partnership"; the Politics of Indigenous Peoples and States -- Chapter 6. Indian Justice in the Andes: Re-rooting or Re-routing? -- -- PART IV: ETHNICITY AND CITIZENSHIP -- -- Introduction -- Salvador Martí i Puig -- -- Chapter 7. The Limits of State Reform and Multiculturalism in Latin America: Contemporary Illustrations -- Chapter 8. Two Steps Forward, One Step Back: Indigenous Peoples and Autonomies in Latin America -- -- PART V: POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN BOLIVIA -- -- Introduction -- Ton Salman -- -- Chapter 9. David versus Goliath in Cochabamba: Water Rights, Neoliberalism and the Revival of Social Protest in Bolivia -- Chapter 10. Neoliberalism and the Re-Emergence of Ethnopolitics in Bolivia -- -- Bibliography Willem Assies --
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  • 74
    ISBN: 9781782384069
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 418 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Inuit hunting traditions are rich in perceptions, practices and stories relating to animals and human beings. The authors examine key figures such as the raven, an animal that has a central place in Inuit culture as a creator and a trickster, and qupirruit, a category consisting of insects and other small life forms. After these non-social and inedible animals, they discuss the dog, the companion of the hunter, and the fellow hunter, the bear, considered to resemble a human being. A discussion of the renewal of whale hunting accompanies the chapters about animals considered 'prey par excellence': the caribou, the seals and the whale, symbol of the whole. By giving precedence to Inuit categories such as 'inua' (owner) and 'tarniq' (shade) over European concepts such as 'spirit 'and 'soul', the book compares and contrasts human beings and animals to provide a better understanding of human-animal relationships in a hunting society.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Chapter 1. Theoretical Perspectives -- Chapter 2. The Animals and Their Environment -- Chapter 3. Becoming A Good Hunter -- Life and Death -- Chapter 4. The Raven, The Bringer of Light -- Chapter 5. Qupirruit, Masters of Life And Death -- Fellow Hunters -- Chapter 6. The Dog, Partner of The Hunter -- Chapter 7. The Bear, A Fellow Hunter -- Prey -- Chapter 8. The Caribou, The Lice of The Earth -- Chapter 9. Seals, The Offspring of The Sea Woman -- Chapter 10. The Whale, Representing The Whole -- Comparison and Conclusions -- Appendix I: Inuit Elders -- Glossary of Inuktitut Words -- References -- Index --
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  • 75
    ISBN: 9781782384021
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 284 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Studies in Public and Applied Anthropology 7
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: Using a "vertical slice" approach, anthropologists critically analyze the relationship between undemocratic uses and abuses of power and the survival of the human species. The contributors scrutinize modern institutions in a variety of regions-from Russia and Mexico to South Korea and the U.S. Up, Down, and Sideways is an ethnographic examination of such phenomena as debtculture, global financial crises, food insecurity, indigenous land and resource appropriation, the mismanagement of health care, andcorporate surrogacy within family life. With a preface by Laura Nader, this isessential reading for anyone seeking solid theories and concrete methods to inform activist scholarship.
    Description / Table of Contents: Foreword -- Laura Nader -- Introduction: On Studying Up, Down, and Sideways: What's at Stake? -- Roberto J. González and Rachael Stryker -- PART I: STUDYING WEALTH AND POWER -- Chapter 1. On Debt: Tracking the Shifting Role of the Debtor in U.S. Bankruptcy Legal Practice -- Linda Coco -- Chapter 2. On Commerce: Analyzing the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997-1998 -- Jay Ou -- Chapter 3. On Bureaucracy: Excessively Up at the International Labour Organisation -- Ellen Hertz -- PART II: STUDYING ENVIRONMENT AND SUBSISTENCE -- Chapter 4. On Dispossession: The Work of Studying Up, Down, and Sideways in Guatemala's Indigenous Land -- Rights Movements -- Liza Grandia -- Chapter 5. On Food: Manufacturing Food Insecurity in Oaxaca, Mexico -- Roberto J. González -- Chapter 6. On Environment: The "Broker State," Peruvian Hydrocarbons Policy, and the Camisea Gas Project -- Patricia Urteaga-Crovetto -- PART III: STUDYING RELATIONSHIPS AND BUREAUCRACIES -- Chapter 7. On Family: Adoptive Parenting Up, Down, and Sideways -- Rachael Stryker -- Chapter 8. On Truth: The Repressed Memory Wars from Top to Bottom -- Robyn Kliger -- Chapter 9. On Common Sense: Lessons on Starting Over from Post-Soviet Ukraine -- Monica Eppinger -- Chapter 10. On Caring: Solidarity Anthropology (or, How to Keep Health Care from Becoming Science Fiction) -- Adrienne Pine -- On Power: Concluding Comments -- Barbara Rose Johnston, Roberto J. González, and Rachael Stryker -- Notes on Contributors -- References --
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  • 76
    ISBN: 9781782382713
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 468 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The land, labor, credit, and trading institutions of Marmara village, in Hausaland, northern Nigeria, are detailed in this study through fieldwork conducted in two national economic cycles - the petroleum-boom prosperity (in 1977-1979), and the macro-economic decline (in 1985, 1996 and 1998). The book unveils a new paradigm of economic change in the West African savannah, demonstrating how rural accumulation in a polygynous society actually limits the extent of inequality while at the same time promoting technical change.  A uniquely African non-capitalist trajectory of accumulation subordinates the acquisition of capital to the expansion of polygynous families, clientage networks, and circles of trading friends.  The whole trajectory is driven by an indigenous ethics of personal responsibility. This model disputes the validity of both Marxian theories of capitalist transformation in Africa and the New Institutional Economics.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Maps, Tables, Charts and Figures -- Preface -- Maps -- -- Introduction: Methods of Fieldwork and Analysis -- -- Chapter 1. An Introduction to the Political Economy and Culture of Marmara Hamlet -- Chapter 2. The Cultural Logic of Non-Capitalist Accumulation -- Chapter 3. Land Distribution and Land Transfers -- Chapter 4. Farm Labouring Systems -- Chapter 5. Credit Relations and Social Consumption -- Chapter 6. Inter-regional Produce Markets -- Chapter 7. Rural Produce Traders and Wealth Acquisition -- Chapter 8. Economic Change from 1985 to 1998 -- Chapter 9. Change, Continuity – and Growth -- -- Appendix I: Basic Information on Household Heads, Marmara, 1979 -- Appendix II: Innovation, Agricultural Extension and Yields -- Appendix III: All Landholding Household Heads Grouped by Labour Practices During the Weeding Operation, 1978 -- Appendix IV: Household Consumption of Food Grain and Soup Ingredients` (Cefane) -- Appendix V: Trading Purchases, Sales and Margins of `M`, 1978 -- Appendix VI: Land Sales and Labour Use, Marmara, 1978 and 1979 -- -- Glossary of Key Hausa Words in the Text -- Bibliography --
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  • 77
    ISBN: 9781782384465
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 264 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The term cosmopolitan is increasingly used within different social, cultural and political settings, including academia, popular media and national politics. However those who invoke the cosmopolitan project rarely ask whose experience, understanding, or vision of cosmopolitanism is being described and for whose purposes? In response, this volume assembles contributors from different disciplines and theoretical backgrounds to examine cosmopolitanism's possibilities, aspirations and applications-as well as its tensions, contradictions, and discontents-so as to offer a critical commentary on the vital but often neglected question: whose cosmopolitanism? The book investigates when, where, and how cosmopolitanism emerges as a contemporary social process, global aspiration or emancipatory political project and asks whether it can serve as a political or methodological framework for action in a world of conflict and difference.
    Description / Table of Contents: List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction: What's In a Word? What's in a Question? -- Andrew Irving and Nina Glick Schiller -- PART I: THE QUESTION OF WHOSE COSMOPOLITANISM? PROVOCATIONS AND RESPONSES -- Provocations -- Chapter 1. Whose Cosmopolitanism? Multiple, Globally Enmeshed and Subaltern -- Gyan Prakash -- Chapter 2. Whose Cosmopolitanism? Genealogies of Cosmopolitanism -- Galin Tihanov -- Chapter 3. Whose Cosmopolitanism? And Whose Humanity? -- Nina Glick Schiller -- Chapter 4. Whose Cosmopolitanism? The Violence of Idealizations and the Ambivalence of Self -- Jackie Stacey -- Chapter 5. Whose Cosmopolitanism? Postcolonial Criticism and The Realities of Neo-Colonial Power -- Robert Spencer -- Responses -- Chapter 6. The Performativity and Suspension of Disbelief -- Jacqueline Rose -- Chapter 7. What Do We Do With Cosmopolitanism? -- David Harvey -- Chapter 8. Cosmopolitan Theory and the Daily Pluralism of Life -- Tariq Ramadan -- Chapter 9. Chance, Contingency and the Face to Face Encounter -- Andrew Irving -- Chapter 10. Cosmopolitanism and Intelligibility -- Sivamohan Valluvan -- PART II: THE QUESTIONS OF WHERE, WHEN, HOW, AND WHETHER: TOWARDS A PROCESSUAL SITUATED COSMOPOLITANISM -- Whose Encounters, Landscapes and Displacements? -- Chapter 11. 'It's Cool to be Cosmo': Tibetan Refugees, Indian Hosts, Richard Gere and 'Crude Cosmopolitanism' in Dharamsala -- Atreyee Sen -- Chapter 12. Diasporic Cosmopolitanism: Migrants, Sociabilities and City-Making -- Nina Glick Schiller -- Chapter 13. Freedom and Laughter in an Uncertain World: Language, Expression and Cosmopolitanism Experience -- Andrew Irving -- Cinema, Literature and the Social Imagination -- Chapter 14. Narratives of Exile: Cosmopolitanism beyond the Liberal Imagination -- Galin Tihanov -- Chapter 15. The Uneasy Cosmopolitans of Code Unknown -- Jackie Stacey -- Chapter 16. Pregnant Possibilities: Cosmopolitanism, Kinship and Reproductive Futurism in Maria Full of Grace and In America -- Heather Latimer -- Chapter 17. Backstage/Onstage Cosmopolitanism: Jia Zhangke's The World -- Felicia Chan -- Endless War or Domains of Sociability? Conflict, Instabilities and Aspirations -- Chapter 18. Politics, Cosmopolitics and Preventive Development at the Kyrgyzstan-Uzbekistan Border -- Madeleine Reeves -- Chapter 19. Memory of War and Cosmopolitan Solidarity -- Ewa Ochman -- Chapter 20. Cosmopolitanism and Conviviality in an Age of Perpetual War -- Paul Gilroy -- Notes on Contributors -- Index --
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  • 78
    E-Resource
    E-Resource
    New York, NY : [s.n.]
    ISBN: 9781782384663
    Language: Undetermined
    Pages: 122 p.
    Edition: 1st edition
    Series Statement: Critical Interventions: A Forum for Social Analysis 14
    Keywords: General Anthropology
    Abstract: The events of the Arab Spring presented a dramatic reconstitution of politics and the public sphere through their aesthetic and performative uses of public space. Mass demonstrations have become a new global political form, grounded in the localization of globalizing processes, institutions, and relationships. This volume delves beneath the seemingly chaotic nature of events to explore the structural dynamics underpinning popular resistance and their support or suppression. It moves beyond what has usually been defined as Arab Spring nations to include critical views on Bahrain, the Palestinian territories, and Turkey. The research and analysis presented explores not just the immediate protests, but also the historical realization, appropriation, and even institutionalization of these critical voices, as well as the role of international criminal law and legal exceptionalism in authorizing humanitarian interventions. Above all, it questions whether the revolutions have since been hijacked and the broad popular uprisings already overrun, suppressed, or usurped by the upper classes.
    Description / Table of Contents: Introduction: The Arab Spring: Revolutions or 1848 Reaction? -- Kjetil Fosshagen -- Chapter 1. Tahrir as Heterotopia: Spaces and Aesthetics of Egyptian Revolution -- Paola Abenante -- Chapter 2. Beyond the Arab Spring: The Aesthetics and Poetics of Popular Revolt and Protest, 2010-2012 -- Pnina Werbner, Martin Webb and Kathryn Spellman-Poots -- Chapter 3. Emergency Law and Hypergovernance: Human Rights and Regime Change in the Arab Spring -- Michael Humphrey -- Chapter 4. The Promises and Limitations ­­of Economic Protests in the West Bank -- Sohbi Samour -- Chapter 5. Stability or Democracy? The Failed Uprising in Bahrain and the Battle for the International Agenda -- Thomas Fibiger -- Chapter 6. The Turkish Model for the Arab Spring: The Corporate Moralist State -- Kjetil Fosshagen -- Notes on Contributors --
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