Autor: Roy Richard Grinker, Stephen C. Lubkemann, Christopher B. Steiner
Wydawca: Wiley
Dostępność: 3-6 tygodni
Cena: 500,85 zł
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ISBN13: |
9781444335224 |
ISBN10: |
1444335227 |
Autor: |
Roy Richard Grinker, Stephen C. Lubkemann, Christopher B. Steiner |
Oprawa: |
Hardback |
Rok Wydania: |
2010-04-23 |
Numer Wydania: |
2nd Edition |
Ilość stron: |
708 |
Wymiary: |
251x174 |
Tematy: |
JB |
The second edition of the popular reader Perspectives on Africa: A Reader in Culture, History, and Representation offers valuable new chapters showing the progress and continuity in the field of African studies. Forty five articles illustrate the dynamic processes by and through which scholars have described and understood African history and culture over the past several decades, and show how profoundly the ethnography of Africa has influenced the direction and development of anthropological and social theory. This new edition offers 14 new selections as well as two entirely new sections, “Conflict and Violent Transformations” and “Development, Governance, and Globalization,” in which the authors reveal processes that have had a vital influence on the historical trajectory and the daily experience of African people in the modern world.
Selections include distinguished anthropologists, historians, philosophers, and Africanists. Collectively they show the multiplicity of voices in African studies, and reveal the interpenetration of ideas and concepts within and across disciplines, regions, and historical periods.
Spis treści:
I. Representation and Discourse
1. Jean and John Comaroff. 1991. “Africa Observed: Discourses of the Imperial Imagination
2. Cheikh Anta Diop. 1974. “The Meaning of Our Work,”
3. Kwame Anthony Appiah. 1993. “Europe Upside Down: Fallacies of the New Afrocentrism
4. V.Y. Mudimbe. 1988. “Discourse of Power and Knowledge of Otherness,”
II. From Tribe to Ethnicity: Kinship and Social Organization
5. Evans–Pritchard, E.E. The Nuer: Time and Space
6. Southall, Aidan W. The Illusion of Tribe
7. Vail, Leroy. Ethnicity in Southern African History
III. Economics as a Cultural System
8. Douglas, M. Lele Economy Compared with the Bushong
9. Coquery–Vidrovitch, C. Research on an
African Mode of Production
10. Hutchinson, S. The Cattle of Money and the Cattle of Girls among the Nuer, cf. Smith
IV. Hunter–Gatherers in Africa
11. Turnbull, C. M. The Lesson of the Pygmies
12. Grinker, R.R. Houses in the Rainforest
13. Wilmsen, E. Land Filled with Flies
14. Solway, J. S. and R. B. Lee. Foragers, Genuine or Spurious?
V. Witchcraft, Science and Rationality
15. Livingstone, D. Conversations on Rain–making
16. Evans–Pritchard, E.E. The Notion of Witchcraft Explains Unfortunate Events
17. Winch, P. Understanding a Primitive Society
18. Austen, Ralph A. 1993. “The Moral Economy of Witchcraft.”
VI. Ancestors, Gods, and the Philosophy of Religion
19. Griaule, M. Conversations with Ogotommeli
20. Houtondji, P. J. African Philosophy, Myth and Reality
21. Kopytoff, I. ancestors as Elders in Africa, cf. Lubkemann, West
VII. Arts, Aesthetics, and Heritage
22. Simon Ottenberg. 1972. “Humorous Masks and Serious Politics among the Afikpo Igbo,”
23. Olu Oguibe. 1999. “Art, Identity, Boundaries: Postmodernism and Contemporary African Art,”
24. Kelly M. Askew. As Plato Duly Warned: Music, Politics and Social Change in Costal East Africa
25. Bayo Hosley. “In Place of Slavery: Fashioning Coastal Identity.”
VIII.Sex and Gender Studies in Africa
26. Boserup, E. The Economics of Polygamy
27. Van Allen, J. “Sitting on a Man”
28. LeClerc, S. Virginity Testing: Managing Sexuality in a Maturing HIV/AIDS Epidemic
IX. Europe in Africa: Colonization
29. Lugard, F.D. The Dual Mandate
30.Rodney, W. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
31. Ranger, T. The Invention of Tradition in Colonial Africa
32. Ngugi, W. T. Detained: A Writer’s Prison Diary
X. Nations and Nationalism
33.Senghor, L. S. Negritude: A Humanism of the Twentieth Centur
y
34. Fanon, F. On National Culture
35. Berman, B. Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Modernity: The Paradox of Mau Mau
36. Steiner, C.B. The Invisible Face: Masks, Ethnicity, and the State in Cote d’Ivoire
XI. Violent Transformations: Conflict and Displacement
37. Gluckman, Max. Order and Rebellion in Tribal Africa
38. Richards, P. "Fighting for the Rainforest"
39. Taylor, C. Sacrifice as Terror: The Rwandan Genocide of 1994
40. Lubkemann, S. Where to be an Ancestor
XII. Development, Governance and Globalization
41. Ferguson, J. “Expectations of Modernity”
42. Uvin, P. Development Aid and Structural Violence: The case of Rwanda
43. Daniel J. Smith. “Culture of Corruption”
44. J.Francois–Bayart. “The Politics of the Belly.”
45. West, H. “ ‘Govern Yourselves’, Democracy and Carnage in Northern Mozambique”
46. Shandy, D. “Nuer–American Passages”
Nota biograficzna:
Roy Richard Grinker, Ph.D. is Professor of Anthropology and International Affairs at George Washington University, Director of the GW Institute for Ethnographic Research, and Editor–in–Chief of Anthropological Quarterly. He is author of four other books, including In the Arms of Africa: The Life of Colin M. Turnbull, Houses in the Rainforest: Ethnicity and Inequality Among Farmers and Foragers in Central Africa, and Unstrange Minds: Remapping the World of Autism.
Christopher B. Steiner is the Lucy C. McDannel ’22 Professor of Art History and Director of Museum Studies at Connecticut College. He is the author of the award–winning book African Art in Transit, and co–editor (with Ruth Phillips) of Unpacking Culture: Art and Commodity in Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds.
Stephen Lubkemann is Associate Professor of Ant
hropology and International Affairs at George Washington University. He is author of Culture in Chaos: An Anthropology of the Social Condition in War and is associate editor for Anthropological Quarterly and a co–founder of GWU’s Diaspora Research Program.
Okładka tylna:
The second edition of the popular reader Perspectives on Africa: A Reader in Culture, History, and Representation offers valuable new chapters showing the progress and continuity in the field of African studies. Forty five articles illustrate the dynamic processes by and through which scholars have described and understood African history and culture over the past several decades, and show how profoundly the ethnography of Africa has influenced the direction and development of anthropological and social theory. This new edition offers 14 new selections as well as two entirely new sections, “Conflict and Violent Transformations” and “Development, Governance, and Globalization,” in which the authors reveal processes that have had a vital influence on the historical trajectory and the daily experience of African people in the modern world.
Selections include distinguished anthropologists, historians, philosophers, and Africanists. Collectively they show the multiplicity of voices in African studies, and reveal the interpenetration of ideas and concepts within and across disciplines, regions, and historical periods.
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