1 / 7

Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis

Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis. Culture Theory Ethnographic Analyses. Understanding culture Culture as an analytical tool (… because of culture …) Culture as a political tool ( …. it is our culture …). Ethnographic analysis

yael
Download Presentation

Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis

  2. Culture Theory • Ethnographic Analyses

  3. Understandingculture • Culture as an analyticaltool (… because of culture …) • Culture as a politicaltool ( …. it is ourculture …)

  4. Ethnographicanalysis - Culture of development

  5. Twomainobjectives Bring out • The influence of culture • The power of ethnography

  6. Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis Part 1: Culture Theory • In this part we take a closer look at how “culture” has developed both as an analytical tool, especially in the realm of identity but also how it has developed as political concept used by activists, politicians and policymakers. • Links and electronic resources • Appadurai, Arjun. “Grassroots Globalization and the Research Imagination, in Public Culture 12(1), 2000, pp, 1-19. • Barth, Fredrik. “Introduction”, in Ethnic Groups and Boundaries: The Social Organization of Cultural Difference. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. http://www.uni-greifswald.de/~histor/~osteuropa/schorkowitz/Barth,%20Frederik.pdf • Clifford, James. “Introduction: Partial Truths”, in Writing Culture: the poetics and politics of ethnography. University of California Press. 1986. http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/soc/readings/Introduction%20Partial%20Truths.pdf • Dragojlovic, Ana, “Dutch Women and Balinese Men: Intimacies, Popular Discourses and Citizenship Rights”, in The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, vol9, no 4, December 2008, pp. 285-303. • Dragojlovic. Ana. “Reframing the nation”, in The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, vol9, no 4, December 2008, pp. 279-284. • Finlay, Andrew. “The persistence of the ‘old’ idea of culture and the peace process in Ireland”, in Critique of Anthropology, 2008; 28(3), pp 279-296. • Geertz, Clifford. “The impact of the concept of culture on the concept of man”, in The interpretation of culture. http://www.slgardiner.com/ERES/Geertz1973_Culture.pdf (1973). • Gupta, Akhil and James Ferguson. “Beyond ‘culture’”: Space, identity and the Politics of Difference”, in Cultural Anthropology 7(1), 1992, pp 6-23. • Marcus, George. “The uses of complicity in the changing mis-en-scene of Anthropological field work”, Representations, no 59, summer 1997, pp, 85-108. • Michael M. J. Fischer. Culture and cultural analysis as experimental systems, in Cultural Anthropology, vol. 22, issue 1, pp. 1-65. • Sherry Ortner, “On Key Symbols”, in American Anthropologist 75(5):1338-46 (1973). • Stolcke, Verena. 1995. Talking Culture. Current Anthropology, vol 36(1). • Compendium • Abu-Lughood, Lila. “Guest and daughter”, in Veiled sentiments. • Abu-Lughood, Lila. “Writing against culture”, in Recapturing Anthropology, ed. Richard Fox. • Bauman, Gerd. “Culture: having, making, or both”, in The Multicultural riddle: rethinking national, ethnic and religious identities. • Boellstorff, Tom “Introduction”, in The Gay Archipelago: sexuality and nation in Indonesia. • Douglas, Mary. “The two bodies” in Natural symbols. • Geertz, “Person, time and conduct”, in The interpretation of culture. • Joel S. Kahn, “A world system of cultures?”, in Culture, Multiculture, Postculture. • Lévi-Strauss, Claude. “Race and Culture”, in The view from afar (1971). • Lévi-Strauss, Claude. “Race and History”, in The race question in modern society (1952). • LowenhauptTsing, Anna. “Preface” and “Introduction”, in Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connection, 2005, Princeton Univ Press. • Mahmood, Sabah, “The subject of freedom”, in Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject. Princeton Univ, 2005. • Ong, Aihwa. “Global Assemblages, Anthropological Problems”, in Global Assemblages: technology, politics, and ethics as Anthropological problems. (2005). • Ortner, Shelly. Excerpt from Sherpas through their rituals. • Rabinow, Paul and William M. Sullivan, “The interpretative Turn: A second look”, in Interpretative Social Science (1979). • Turner, Victor. “Social Dramas and Ritual Metaphors”, in Dramas, fields and metahpors: symbolic action in human society.

  7. Understanding Culture: Theoretical Perspectives and Ethnographic Analysis Part 2: Ethnographic Analysis • This part of the course will develop a particular theme – development/globalisation - as a subject of cultural/ethnographic analysis • The course is organised in two parallel streams: • An overview of anthropological analyses of development understood as a key aspect and driving force of the globalisation of modernity (particularly in the South); • Reviews of four anthropological monographs dedicated to the above theme; the aim is to understand how the different authors have used theory to make sense of particular ethnographies of development/globalisation in different parts of the world • Literature: • Stream 1: compulsory for all: • Edelman, M & Haugerud, A. (ed.) 2005, The anthropology of development and globalization: from classical political economy to contemporary neoliberalism, Blackwell Publishing (OBS: Introduction: the anthropology of development and globalization) • Escobar, A. 1995, Encountering development: The making and unmaking of the Third World, Princeton University Press • Scott, J. C. 1998, Seeing like a state: How certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed, Yale University Press (pp 1-103; 181- 193; 262[223?]-359). • Stream 2: Each group chooses one of the following monographs: • Ferguson, J. 1990 (1994), The anti-politics machine: “development”, depolitization and bureaucratic power in Lesotho, Cambridge University Press (University of Minnesota Press) • Jonsson, H. 2005, Mien relations: mountain people and state control in Thailand, Cornell University Press • Smith, J. H. 2008, Bewitching development: witchcraft and the reinvention of development in neoliberal Kenya, University of Chicago Press • Tsing, A. L. 2005, Friction: an ethnography of global connection, Princeton University Press

More Related