|
Debate
Reflections on the Comaroff lecture
Sally Falk Moore
Response
to Moore
second thoughts
Jean Comaroff And John L. Comaroff
Negotiating
parentage: the political economy of økinshipÓ in central
Sulawesi, Indonesia
Albert Schrauwers
Widespread
fosterage and adoption has recently emerged around Lake
Poso in Central Sulawesi within the wider constraints
of peasantization, whereby kin are ideologically set off
as a source of noncommodified labor for a newly constituted
peasantry. The differentiation of this peasantry has been
blunted and a kin-based ømoral economyÓ created through
the transfer of dependents (rather than resources) between
households. This transfer of kin has been eased by a concept
of parentage that stresses nurturance and sharing, not
just filiation. Class tensions are muted by the insistence
that the calculation of costs and benefits between kin
is unseemly. Fosterage, however, opens up tensions as
some øparentsÓ exploit their newly acquired øfreeÓ domestic
labor. This article focuses on the terms foster children
use to resist this exploitation, namely their refusal
to acknowledge a parental tie. Drawing on historically
constituted relations of subordination, these dependents
draw on the now legally defunct vocabulary of master (kabosenya)
and slave (watua) to describe their position. [parenthood,
adoption, development, slavery]
Villages
dammed, villages repossessed: a memorial movement in northwest
China
Jun Jing
In
this article, I employ the concept of repossession to
analyze the politics of memory in the rural county of
Yongjing, northwest China. I focus on an innovative social
movement that works toward community recovery from the
devastating impacts of forced resettlement and farmland
destruction. I suggest why this movement should be considered
a social process by which memories of trauma were transformed
into a political discourse that holds a powerful state
bureaucracy accountable for a multiplicity of injuries
inflicted in the name of economic development. The concept
of repossession, strictly defined within the context of
collective actions, refers to the attempts of displaced
and disenfranchised peasants to regain a politically silenced
voice of resentment, reestablish a material basis of village
life, and reconstruct a ruined landscape of popular religion.
[protest, memorial movement, repossession, mandatory resettlement,
community recovery]
Alguito
para ganar (a little something to earn): profits and losses
in peasant economies
Enrique Mayer and Manuel Glave
We
explore various ways in which small-scale peasants in
the highlands of Peru conceptualize the everyday concept
of profit in the contemporary context of neoliberalism.
Through a process of approximations, we use the results
of a survey of potato fields in two comparable valleys
in Peru to clarify the differences between a strict business
accounting procedure to establish profits or losses and
the procedure that peasants use to evaluate the profitability
of cash crops. We suggest that peasants evaluate profits
or losses of cash crops in terms of a simple cash-out
and cash-in flow. We indicate that this kind of calculus
carries an implicit subsidy that permits market participation
but provides little or no long-run benefit under prevailing
productivity conditions and price levels. We also look
at how farmers evaluate the status of their subsistence
crops by showing that they ignore important cash expenses
that are necessary to produce them. Finally, we describe
accounting procedures characteristic of Andean peasants
to understand how they monitor resource flows in their
household-based farms. Analysis of the data leads us to
question the øsubsistence firstÓ model of peasant economies
and to posit an interdependent relationship between subsistence
and commercial sectors in which money plays an important
but perverse role as it cycles through the market and
the household. [peasants, Andes, Peru, cash and subsistence
crops, profitability, market integration, genetic erosion]
The
burden of heritage: claiming a place for a West Indian
culture
Karen Fog Olwig
The
cultural construction of the past is of increasing interest
to anthropologists, as well as to the people they study.
Many of the most forceful and visible expressions of the
past are fueled by the so-called heritage movement, which
is becoming a worldwide concern, born of an uneasy combination
of national ideology, ethnic politics, and tourist industry
interests. I explore the cultural politics of heritage
in relation to the different ways in which the people
of the Caribbean island of St. John, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
have made a place for themselves in time and space. An
exploration of the role of oral tradition in constructing
different versions of the past shows that the islanders
themselves feel considerable ambivalence toward the expectations
of the promulgators of heritage, including anthropologists.
I raise questions both about the construction of historical
identity in the Caribbean and, more generally, about the
witting or unwitting role of anthropologists in the creation
of heritage. [African-Caribbean culture, cultural heritage,
oral traditions, cultural identity, cultural construction
of place, sense of pastness]
The
predicament of dress: polyvalency and the ironies of cultural
identity
Deborah Durham
To
appreciate better the uncertain and unstable way that
Herero women of Botswana understand their distinctive
dress, I extend Bakhtinés notion of øsparkleÓ to include
the disparate modalities through which meaning is constituted.
An embodied subjectivity, or experiential sensibility,
intrudes upon structured contrasts that also give the
dress meaning in such registers as gender, ethnic relations,
and the political economy of the liberal democratic state.
I use Herero womenés sense of the dress to question recent
approaches to øcultureÓ among scholars who look only at
its differentiating function, since Herero women also
see the dress as a means of building mutuality. [dress,
identity, embodiment, agency, gender, southern Africa,
culture
Cultural
polyphony and identity formation: negotiating tradition
in Attica
Dimitra Gefou-Madianou
Over
the past century the Messogitic communities of Attica
have been seen by the Athenian elite as degenerate and
marginal groups because of two elements central to their
culture: the Arvanitic language and retsina wine. These
elements were perceived as undermining the eliteés project
of constructing a homogenous Greek nation-state based
on links to the ancient Greek language, a classical spirit,
and a glorified vision of the folk. This dismissive discourse
has influenced the ways Messogites have viewed themselves
as well as the Athenians, and has given rise to a counterdiscourse.
In this article, I attempt to follow the dialogue between
the dominant Athenian discourse and the Messogitic counterdiscourse
as these have been transformed over time. Arguing that
traditions and identities are not only constantly invented
in an ongoing negotiation process, I also seek to show
how symbolic elements can be appropriated by different
groups and invested with novel meanings and significance
in what I call a double dialectic of tradition. However,
I contend, this process does not necessarily improve the
subordinatesé position, but may lead to their further
marginalization. [double dialectic of tradition, identity,
nationalism, local versus national, Arvanitic language,
retsina wine, Greece, ethnicity]
Open
spaces and dwelling places: being at home on hill farms
in the Scottish borders
John Gray
In
this article, I highlight the spatial dimension of social
life. I analyze the shepherding practice of øgoing around
the hill,Ó a practice central to sheep farming in the
Scottish borderlands. I distinguish between, on the one
hand, the more rationalized space of fields and the commoditized
sheep raised in them, and, on the other hand, the wild
but meaningful hills and the sheep living on them. Using
Heideggerés concept of ødwelling,Ó I describe how, through
the practice of going around the hill, sheep farming people
in the Scottish borders create an attachment to the land
that defines the farm, the farming way of life, and the
historically formulated borders region as places in which
they øfeel at home.Ó Together these places comprise the
spatial dimensions of locality and identity for sheep
farmers. [place, space, Scotland, borders, shepherding,
identity]
Return
to Sumatra: 1957, 1997
Edward M. Bruner
In
this article, I reflect on how ethnography has changed
between my 1957 fieldwork in a Toba Batak village in Sumatra,
Indonesia, and my return visit in 1997. I argue that current
issues of transnationalism and globalization are as significant
in what is seemingly the most traditional of anthropological
sites, a mountain village in Southeast Asia, as in more
modern worldly settings. I discuss culture and ethnography,
and I explore different experiential meanings of the term
village. [ethnography, culture, transnationalism, locality,
Toba Batak, Indonesia, exchange, mortuary rites]
Reviews
After
Tylor: British Social Anthropology 1888?1951 (Stocking,
Jr)
Elizabeth Colson
Fields
of Wheat, Hills of Blood: Passages to Nationhood in Greek
Macedonia 1870?1990 (Karakasidou)
David Rheubottom
Blacked
Out: Dilemmas of Race, Identity, and Success at Capital
High (Fordham)
Nicholas Baham
The
Trading Crowd: An Ethnography of the Shanghai Stock Market
(Hertz)
Alan Smart
Women
and Social Movements in Latin America: Power from Below
(Stephen)
Joann Martin
Naked
Science: Anthropological Inquiries into Boundaries, Power,
and Knowledge (Nader, ed.)
Stacia E. Zabusky
The
Social Life of Numbers: A Quechua Ontology of Numbers
and Philosophy of Arithmetic (Urton)
Kendall A. King
Reason
and Passion: Representation of Gender in Malay Society
(Peletz)
G. G. Weix
Discourses
of Development: Anthropological Perspectives (Grillo
and Stirrat, eds.)
Lisa B. Markowitz
Re-Situating
Identity: The Politics of Race, Ethnicity, and Culture
(Amit-Talai and Knowles, eds.)
Paul Ryer
Overlooking
Nazareth: The Ethnography of Exclusion in Galilee (Rabinowitz)
Nadia Abu El-Haj
Miroirs
du Colonialisme, Terrain, no. 28, Carnets du Patronomie
Paul Stoller
Keeping
House in Lusaka (Hansen)
Lisa Cliggett
Gender
Reversals and Gender Cultures: Anthropological and Historical
Perspectives (Ramet, ed.)
Adrianne Dana-Tabet
The
Allure of the Foreign: Imported Goods in Postcolonial
Latin America (Orlove, ed.)
Linda J. Seligmann
Cross-Cultural
Marriage: Identity and Choice (Breger and Hill, eds.)
Ilana Gershon
Freeze
Frame: Alaska Eskimos in the Movies (Fienup-Riordan)
Nelson Graburn and Cari Borja
Biographical
Objects: How Things Tell the Stories of Peopleés Lives
(Hoskins)
Carol Hendrickson
The
Meanings of Macho: Being a Man in Mexico City (Gutmann)
Richard Parker
Godés
Daughters: Evangelical Women and the Power of Submission
(Griffith)
Thomas Csordas
Cyborg
Babies: From Techno-Sex to Techno-Tots (Davis-Floyd
and Dumit, eds.)
Susan Markens
The
Anthropology of Pregnancy Loss: Comparative Studies in
Miscarriage, Stillbirth, and Neonatal Death (Cecil,
ed.)
Elisha Renne
Missionaries,
Anthropologists, and Human Rights (Headland and Whiteman,
eds.)
Elizabeth Brusco
Forging
Identities: Gender, Communities and the State in India
(Hasan, ed.)
Saba Mahmood
Mass
Culture and Modernism in Egypt (Armbrust)
Gregory Starrett
A
Different Kind of War Story (Nordstrom)
Alcinda Honwana
Pronouncing
and Persevering: Gender and the Discourses of Disputing
in an African Islamic Court (Hirsch)
Beverly Stoeltje
Russian
Talk: Culture and Conversation During Perestroika
(Ries)
David Abramson
When
We Began, There Were Witchmen: An Oral History from Mount
Kenya (Fadiman)
John G. Galaty
Playing
on the Mother-Ground: Cultural Routines for Childrenés
Development (Lancy)
Jill E. Korbin
Peripheral
Migrants: Haitians and Dominican Republic Sugar Plantations
(Martíz)
Eugenia Georges
Permitted
and Prohibited Desires: Mothers, Comics, and Censorship
in Japan (Allison)
Misty L. Bastian
In
the Beginning: The Navajo Genesis (Levy)
Charlotte J. Frisbie
Myths
of Ethnicity and Nation: Immigration, Work, and Identity
in the Belize Banana Industry (Moberg)
Melissa A. Johnson
Exotics
at Home: Anthropologies, Others, American Modernity
(Di Leonardo)
Hervé Varenne
Tourism
and Culture: An Applied Perspective (Chambers, ed.);
Tourists and Tourism: Identifying with People and Places
(Abram, Waldren, Macleod, eds.)
Malcolm Crick
Berlin
in Focus: Cultural Transformations in Germany (Becker-Cantarino,
ed.)
Hermine G. De Soto
Two
Towns in Germany: Commerce and the Urban Transformation
(Haeuser)
Hermine G. De Soto
School-Smart
and Mother-Wise: Working-Class Womenés Identity and Schooling
(Luttrell)
Amy Stambach
Economies
and Cultures: Foundations of Economic Anthropology
(Wilk)
Nicola Tannenbaum
Re-Imaging
Japanese Women (Imamura, ed.)
Susan J. Napier
Office
Ladies and Salaried Men: Power, Gender, and Work in Japanese
Companies (Ogasawara)
Susan J. Napier
Transforming
Societies, Transforming Anthropology (Moran, ed.)
Stephen Brush
Between
Marriage and the Market: Intimate Politics and Survival
in Cairo (Hoodfar)
Elizabeth Faier
The
Anthropology of Infectious Disease: International Health
Perspectives (Inhorn and Brown, eds.)
Andrea S. Wiley
Takarazuka:
Sexual Politics and Popular Culture in Modern Japan (Robertson)
Teri Silvio
The
Object of Labor: Commodification in Socialist Hungary
(Lamplan)
Marida Hollos
Reclaiming
a Scientific Anthropology (Kuznar)
Michael C. Reed
Own
or Other Culture (Okely)
Todd Sanders
Property
in Economic Context (Hunt and Gilman, eds.)
Bonnie McCay
Social
Reproduction and History in Melanesia: Mortuary Ritual,
Gift Exchange, and Custom in the Tanga Islands (Foster)
Karen Sykes
Ache
Life History: The Ecology and Demography of a Foraging
People (Hill and Hurtado)
Richard Reed
Thanks
from the Editor
Cumulative
Index, Volumes 22-25
|