American Ethnologist
Volume 30, Issue 1
Foreword
Virginia R. Dominguez
On Fear and State Violence
Darker than midnight: Fear, vulnerability, and terror making in urban
Burma (Myanmar)
Monique Skidmore
The Burmese military State constructs fear and vulnerability among its
citizenry through the strategic use of political violence. Fear is inherently
temporal and, unlike despair, requires that one have the ability to envisage
alternatives to a future of complete domination. Burmese people strive not to
express fear, and the anthropologist’s articulation of fear contrasts
with the silence that fear engenders among them. In this article I reflect on
strategies for the ethical collection of experiences of fear in situations where
suppressing or denying fear is the most common survival strategy.
[Burma, Myanmar, violence, fear, state construction of affect, vulnerability,
time]
“In our own hands”: Lynching, justice, and the law in Bolivia
Daniel M. Goldstein
Vigilantes in the marginal communities of a Bolivian city take the law
into their own hands both to police their communities against crime and as a
way of expressing their dissatisfaction with the state and its official policing
and justice systems. In this article, I examine an incident of vigilante violence
(lynching) in one such Bolivian barrio to explore the ways in which vigilantism
acts as amoral complaint against state inadequacy, challenging state legitimacy
and redefining ideas about justice, citizenship, and law in the process. I also
analyze the range of discourses that surrounds lynching in contemporary Bolivian
society, exploring the interpretive conflict that results as barrio residents
attempt to counter official representations of the meaning of vigilantism in
their community.
[violence, vigilantism, legal anthropology, citizenship, Bolivia, the Andes]
When Narratives of the Past
Differ
Kapi‘olani
at the brink: Dilemmas of historical ethnography in 19th-century Hawai‘i
Sally Engle Merry
Shifting accounts of the confrontation in 1824 between a Christianized
Hawaiian chiefess and the priestess of Pele, the deity of the volcano, illustrate
the way the same story changes over time. A comparison of these different versions
and of the circumstances of their production provides a way of thinking about
how historical ethnographers can use such plural and competing accounts as the
basis for writing histories of colonial encounters. It shows how the choice
of one or another version of a story has significant implications for the histories
we tell and for the way groups understand their pasts.
[colonialism, historical anthropology, ethnography, Hawai‘i, missionaries]
Nongovernmental organizations and the work of memory in northern Thailand
Henry D. Delcore
Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) provide an ideal context in which
to examine the production and reproduction of identities and modernities in
the contemporary world because they tend to concentrate within themselves ideas,
people, and resources drawn from various sites in the world system. In this
article, I examine the practice of memory among NGO activists, village leaders,
and farmers in Nan Province, northern Thailand. Asessing the impact of NGOs
on the cultural constitution of Thai modernity, I trace contending representations
of the rural past to different social concerns with identity and interests that
have emerged in the era of planned development and increasing global interconnectedness.
[Thailand, NGOs, development, globalization, memory, modernity]
Debating the Relevance of
Religious Beliefs
Pentecostalism in translation: Religion and the production
of community in the Haitian diaspora
Paul Brodwin
I examine the growth of Pentecostalism in the Haitian diaspora through
both a neo-Weberian framework and the argument, derived from Walter Benjamin,
that the cultural translation of religious doctrine should resonate with the
original and not merely substitute scholarly categories for sacred meanings.
Haitian migrants to Guadeloupe, French West Indies, appropriate Pentecostalism
to produce a transnational enclave in the face of marginality and displacement.
Using Christian idioms, they defend themselves against denigrating stereotypes
and articulate sentiments of loss and remembrance of the Haitian homeland. Their
theology of sin, salvation, and the spirit therefore overlaps with anthropological
frameworks about the production of community. These two languages complement
each other, and each provides a partial theory to explain the need for moral
separationism as well as its likely effects. Examining this complementary relationship
suggests both the specificity of Haitian Pentecostalism and the limits of Benjamin’s
literary model for ethnographic interpretation.
[Pentecostalism, Haiti, transnationalism, religion, morality, translation,
Benjamin]
Religious practice and cultural politics in Jewish Copenhagen
Andrew Buckser
The small Jewish community of Copenhagen is one of the most liberal and
assimilated in Europe. In its liturgy, its leadership, and its ritual practice,
however, it maintains strictly orthodox forms. In this article, I examine how
this orthodox dominance has persisted, despite the often vigorously expressed
dissatisfaction of the liberal majority. I argue that the confluence of Jewish
religious forms with the cultural setting of contemporary Denmark tends to confer
control over ritual practice on the orthodox. The interaction of Jewish institutional
structures with Danish social patterns leads to orthodox social control, whereas
the interaction of Jewish religious ideas with the Danish cultural setting promotes
cultural control. These outcomes have implications for social scientific approaches
to contemporary conservative religious movements, which have often been characterized
primarily as forms of opposition to modern social change. The political dynamics
of such movements are not simple reflections of a broad opposition between tradition
and modernity; they emerge out of the intricate and often unpredictable interplay
of religious structures with the social and cultural worlds within which those
structures are embedded.
[cultural politics, Denmark, Jews, liberalism, religion]
Discriminating Change in
Everyday Life
Places, practices,
and things: The articulation of Arrernte kinship with welfare and work
Diane Austin-Broos
In this article, I discuss problems of articulation that occur between
kin-based and market-based societies. In particular, I address Western Arrernte
(Aranda) people in central Australia and their struggles to articulate bilateral
kinship networks with a welfare economy and state. I also consider the transitions
involved as Arrernte people come to objectify kin relations more in terms of
commodities and cash and less in detailed knowledge and experience of country.
My discussion aims to underline the tensions and struggles in an Arrernte circumstance
sometimes overlooked in recent anthropology, which has focused either on ritual
descent groups or on issues of welfare and economics without relating them to
kinship. I identify differing contexts of ethnography, along with their import
both for analysis and a politics of difference.
[Aborigines, Aranda, articulation, bilateral kinship, commodities, welfare,
demand sharing, central Australia]
In a cup of tea: Commodities and history among Samburu pastoralists
in northern Kenya
Jon D. Holtzman
In this article, I explore the 20th-century history of Samburu pastoralists
through the lens of a particular beverage, tea. In classic anthropological analyses,
“drug foods” such as tea have been taken as emblematic of the spread
of global capitalism. Tea, however, is a rare example of a commodity that Samburu
have adopted as a central component of a self-defined “traditional”
culture specifically counterposed to change. Tracing historical transformations
in practices and meanings associated with tea use, I consider both the processes
underlying its acceptance and their import in explicating broader processes
through which Samburu agents have negotiated contexts of change.
[Kenya, consumption pastoralism, food, tea, history]
Review essay
My aim is true:
Postnostalgic reflections on the future of anthropological science
Karen Sykes