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Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments
Vital Diplomacy: The Ritual Everyday on a Dammed River in Amazonia
Violent Becomings: State Formation, Sociality, and Power in Mozambique
Ebook series7 titles

Ethnography, Theory, Experiment Series

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About this series

Loving cows, then killing them. The relation with cattle in Mursi country is shaped by the dichotomy between the value given to it during life and the death imposed upon it. The killing of cattle may be brief and inflicted with few words, but it is preceded by a series of intense aesthetic practices, such as body painting and adornments, colour poetics, poems and oratory art. This book investigates the link between the nurturing and killing of cattle with Mursi daily life and finds that these rituals cut across pastoralism, social organisation and politics in forming the very fabric of Mursi society.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 1, 2015
Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments
Vital Diplomacy: The Ritual Everyday on a Dammed River in Amazonia
Violent Becomings: State Formation, Sociality, and Power in Mozambique

Titles in the series (7)

  • Violent Becomings: State Formation, Sociality, and Power in Mozambique

    4

    Violent Becomings: State Formation, Sociality, and Power in Mozambique
    Violent Becomings: State Formation, Sociality, and Power in Mozambique

    Violent Becomings conceptualizes the Mozambican state not as the bureaucratically ordered polity of the nation-state, but as a continuously emergent and violently challenged mode of ordering. In doing so, this book addresses the question of why colonial and postcolonial state formation has involved violent articulations with so-called ‘traditional’ forms of sociality. The scope and dynamic nature of such violent becomings is explored through an array of contexts that include colonial regimes of forced labor and pacification, liberation war struggles and civil war, the social engineering of the post-independence state, and the popular appropriation of sovereign violence in riots and lynchings.

  • Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments

    3

    Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments
    Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments

    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.

  • Vital Diplomacy: The Ritual Everyday on a Dammed River in Amazonia

    5

    Vital Diplomacy: The Ritual Everyday on a Dammed River in Amazonia
    Vital Diplomacy: The Ritual Everyday on a Dammed River in Amazonia

    In Brazil, where forest meets savanna, new towns, agribusiness and hydroelectric plants form a patchwork with the indigenous territories. Here, agricultural work, fishing, songs, feasts and exchanges occupy the Enawenê-nawê for eight months of each year during a season called Yankwa. Vital Diplomacy focuses on this major ceremonial cycle to shed new light on classic Amazonian themes such as kinship, gender, manioc cultivation and cuisine, relations with non-humans and foreigners, and the interplay of myth and practice, exploring how ritual contains and diverts the threat of violence by reconciling antagonistic spirits, coordinating social and gender divides, and channelling foreign relations and resources.

  • Cutting Cosmos: Masculinity and Spectacular Events among the Bugkalot

    6

    Cutting Cosmos: Masculinity and Spectacular Events among the Bugkalot
    Cutting Cosmos: Masculinity and Spectacular Events among the Bugkalot

    For the first time in over 30 years, a new ethnographic study emerges on the Bugkalot tribe, more widely known as the Ilongot of the northern Philippines. Exploring the notion of masculinity among the Bugkalot, Cutting Cosmos is not only an experimental, anthropological study of the paradoxes around which Bugkalot society revolves, but also a reflection on anthropological theory and writing. Focusing on the transgressive acts through which masculinity is performed, this book explores the idea of the cosmic cut, the ritual act that enables the Bugkalot man to momentarily hold still the chaotic flows of his world.

  • Going to Pentecost: An Experimental Approach to Studies in Pentecostalism

    7

    Going to Pentecost: An Experimental Approach to Studies in Pentecostalism
    Going to Pentecost: An Experimental Approach to Studies in Pentecostalism

    Co-authored by three anthropologists with long–term expertise studying Pentecostalism in Vanuatu, Angola, and Papua New Guinea/the Trobriand Islands respectively, Going to Pentecost offers a comparative study of Pentecostalism in Africa and Melanesia, focusing on key issues as economy, urban sociality, and healing. More than an ordinary comparative book, it recognizes the changing nature of religion in the contemporary world – in particular the emergence of “non-territorial” religion (which is no longer specific to places or cultures) – and represents an experimental approach to the study of global religious movements in general and Pentecostalism in particular.

  • The Children of Gregoria: Dogme Ethnography of a Mexican Family

    8

    The Children of Gregoria: Dogme Ethnography of a Mexican Family
    The Children of Gregoria: Dogme Ethnography of a Mexican Family

    The Children of Gregoria portrays a struggling Mexico, told through the story of the Rosales family. The people entrenched in the violent communities that the Rosales belong to have been discussed, condemned, analyzed, joked about and cheered, but rarely have they been seriously listened to. This book highlights their voices and allows them to tell their own stories in an accessible, literary manner without prejudice, persecution or judgment.

  • Cattle Poetics: How Aesthetics Shapes Politics in Mursiland, Ethiopia

    9

    Cattle Poetics: How Aesthetics Shapes Politics in Mursiland, Ethiopia
    Cattle Poetics: How Aesthetics Shapes Politics in Mursiland, Ethiopia

    Loving cows, then killing them. The relation with cattle in Mursi country is shaped by the dichotomy between the value given to it during life and the death imposed upon it. The killing of cattle may be brief and inflicted with few words, but it is preceded by a series of intense aesthetic practices, such as body painting and adornments, colour poetics, poems and oratory art. This book investigates the link between the nurturing and killing of cattle with Mursi daily life and finds that these rituals cut across pastoralism, social organisation and politics in forming the very fabric of Mursi society.

Author

Bjørn Enge Bertelsen

Bjørn Enge Bertelsen is Associate Professor at the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen and has undertaken anthropological research in Mozambique since 1998.

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