26 research outputs found
Laughing when you shouldn't Being "good" among the Batek of Peninsular Malaysia
Batek people describe their many laughter taboos with utmost seriousness, and in ethical terms of good and bad. Despite this, people often get it wrongâsometimes laughing all the more when the taboos forbid it. Because laughter can be ambiguous and impossible to control, being wrong can be accepted without the need for discussion or reflection. People thus act autonomously while holding deeply shared ethical orientations. Here, ethics can be both culturally predefined and shaped by individuals, as when it comes to laughter people draw on individual and shared concerns in an ad hoc, flexible manner. Laughter's tangled contradictions thus demonstrate that people's understandings of being âgoodâ are mutually implicated with their understandings of what it means to be a person in relation to others
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Where have all the kin gone? On hunter-gatherersâ sharing, kinship and scale
This book was funded by the EU 7th Framework Programme (7FP), TropicMicroArch 623293 Project (http://cordis.europa.eu/project/rcn/187754_en.html). The book will be Open Access, thanks to FP7 post-grant Open Access (https://www.openaire.eu/postgrantoapilot)
Un cosmos connecté « pair à pair »
La parentĂ© intime qui fonde les minuscules communautĂ©s de chasseurs-cueilleurs sâĂ©tend aux non-humains, ceux-ci Ă©tant souvent considĂ©rĂ©s comme des sortes de parents plutĂŽt que comme des personnes dâun autre type. Cet article aborde les limites dâune approche des mondes des chasseurs-cueilleurs qui partirait de lâopposition binaire « égalitaire/hiĂ©rarchique ». Ces concepts imposent Ă leurs communautĂ©s des problĂ©matiques Ă©conomiques et politiques modernes, ainsi que lâidĂ©e selon laquelle la sociĂ©tĂ© est constituĂ©e dâindividus commensurables pouvant ĂȘtre comparĂ©s et Ă©valuĂ©s, et donc considĂ©rĂ©s comme Ă©gaux (ou non). Je soutiens ici que les chasseurs-cueilleurs forment des « communautĂ©s de parenté » plus quâhumaines, composĂ©es de membres hĂ©tĂ©rogĂšnes aux liens multiples et sans mesure commune. Les chasseurs-cueilleurs conçoivent la sociĂ©tĂ© dans un idiome local de parentĂ©, kinship en anglais, cette conception se rapprochant de ce que signifierait la parentĂ© si le suffixe -ship de kinship renvoyait Ă un « compĂ©tence », comme dans horsemanship (« équitation », litt. : « la compĂ©tence du cavalier »), plutĂŽt quâĂ un « état », comme dans dictatorship (« dictature »). Leurs communautĂ©s de parentĂ© subsistent grĂące Ă un travail habile de connexion, lequel implique un rĂ©seau ouvert dont les divers membres sont constituĂ©s par la coopĂ©ration participative elle-mĂȘme. Ma proposition est que les fins de lâ« égalitarisme » portent notre attention sur une alternative connective de type chasseur-cueilleur, un cosmos connectĂ© « pair Ă pair ».The intimate kinship basis of minuscule hunter-gatherer communities extends to non-humans, who are often regarded as kin of sorts rather than as different sorts of persons. This paper addresses the limits of approaching the worlds of hunter-gatherers starting from the binary terms « egalitarian » and « hierarchical ». These concepts impose onto their communities economic and political modern issues, as well as the notion that society is constitutive of commensurate individuals who can be compared and evaluated, and thus be regarded as equal (or not). I argue here that hunter-gatherers form more-than-human « kinship communities » composed of multiply-connected and incommensurate heterogeneous members. Hunter-gatherers figure society in a local kinship idiom, where their sense of kinship approximates what the term would signify if we read its suffix -ship as « skill » (as in horsemanship) rather than « position » (as in dictatorship). Their kinship communities subsist in skillful connection-work, which involves an open-ended network whose various members are constituted by participative cooperation itself. The end of « egalitarianism », I propose, opens our attention to a hunter-gatherer connective alternative, a « peer-to-peer » connected cosmos
âANIMISMOâ REVISITADO: PESSOA, MEIO AMBIENTE E EPISTEMOLOGIA RELACIONAL
O animismo se projeta na literatura como uma religião simples e uma epistemologia falha, em grande medida porque até hoje foi visto a partir perspectivas modernistas. Neste artigo, teorias da antropologia, das clåssicas às mais contemporùneas, são criticadas. A partir do caso etnogråfico de um povo caçador coletor, explora-se como funcionam as ideias animistas no contexto das pråticas sociais, com atenção às construçÔes locais de pessoa relacional e suas relaçÔes com as percepçÔes ecológicas do meio ambiente. Oferece-se uma reformulação do animismo enquanto uma epistemologia relacional
What is analysis? Between theory, ethnography, and method
Recent years in anthropology have seen a noticeable trend, moving from debates about theory to a concern with method. So while some generations ago we would tend to identify ourselves as anthropologists with reference to particular theoretical paradigms-for example, Marxism, (post-)structuralism, cognitivism, cultural materialism, interpretivism-these days our tendency is to align ourselves, often eclectically, with proposals conceived as methodological: entanglements, assemblages, ontologies, technologies of description, epistemic partnerships, problematizations, collaborative anthropology, the art of noticing, and so onPeer Reviewe