We don't have to imagine what Wagner might have made of this inspired collection: his concluding commentary on each of these extraordinary chapters is in effect a collection in itself. The sparks they together ignite make this an editorial and publishing triumph. Professor Dame Marilyn Strathern, University of Cambridge;If Roy Wagner famously `invented' culture, the contributors to this volume `counter-invent' Wagner, at once engaging comprehensively and didactically with his thought, and exteriorizing it onto novel conceptual and geographical territories. A book from `tomorrow's yesterday' (Wagner), The Culture of Invention in the Americas anticipates for us the anthropology to come - playful, experimental, and deeply ethnographic.Alberto Corsin Jimenez, Spanish National Research Council

The Culture of Invention in the Americas takes the theoretical contribution of one of anthropology's most radical thinkers, Roy Wagner, as a basis for conceptual improvisation. It uses Wagner's most synthetic and complex insights - developed in Melanesia and captured in the title of his most famous book, The Invention of Culture - as a springboard for an exploration of other anthropological and societal imaginaries. What do the inherent reflexivity, recursiveness and limits of all and any peoples' anthropologies render for us to write and think about, and live within? Who is doing anthropology about whom? Which are the best ways to convey our partial grasp of these conundrums: theory, poetry, jokes? No claim is made to resolve what should not be seen as a problem. Instead, inspired by Roy Wagner's study and use of metaphor, this book explores analogical variations of these riddles. The chapters bring together ethnographic regions rarely investigated together: indigenous peoples of Mexico and Lowland South America; and Afro-American peoples of Brazil and Cuba. The `partial connections' highlighted by the authors' analytic conjunctions - Ifa divination practices and Yanomami shamanism, Ki~sedje (Amazonia) and Huichol (Mexico) anthropology of Whites, and Meso-American and Afro-American practices of sacrifice - show the inspirational potential of such rapprochements. As the first book to acknowledge the full range of Wagner's anthropological contributions, and an initial joint exploration of Native American and Afro-American ethnographies, this experimental work honours Wagner's vision of a multiplicity of peoples' anthropologies through and of each other. It concludes with a remarkable dialogue created by Roy Wagner's responses to each author's work. We don't have to imagine what Wagner might have made of this inspired collection: his concluding commentary on each of these extraordinary chapters is in effect a collection in itself. The sparks they together ignite make this an editorial and publishing triumph. Professor Dame Marilyn Strathern, University of Cambridge If Roy Wagner famously `invented' culture, the contributors to this volume `counter-invent' Wagner, at once engaging comprehensively and didactically with his thought, and exteriorizing it onto novel conceptual and geographical territories. A book from `tomorrow's yesterday' (Wagner), The Culture of Invention in the Americas anticipates for us the anthropology to come - playful, experimental, and deeply ethnographic. Alberto Corsin Jimenez, Spanish National Research Council
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This book takes the radical theories of Roy Wagner as a basis for conceptual improvisation. Applying insights into the on-going invention of culture, developed in Melanesia, this collection explores Native American and Afro-American ethnographies from the Americas and concludes with a commentary responding to each author's work by Wagner himself.
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Introduction - Jose Antonio Kelly and Pedro Pitarch; Chapter 1: Blood, initiation, and participation: what is given and what is made in Afro-Brazilian religions - Marcio Goldman; Chapter 2: How myths make men in Afro-Cuban divination - Martin Holbraad; Chapter 3: The domestication of the abstract soul - Pedro Pitarch; Chapter 4: Invented gifts, given exchange: the recursive anthropology of Huichol modernity - Johannes Neurath; Chapter 5: Child-snatchers and head-choppers: a highland Meso-American reverse anthropology - Roger Magazine; Chapter 6: Invention, convention and clowning: symbolic obviation and dialectical mediation in the Yaqui Easter ritual - Marianna Keisalo; Chapter 7: Visible dancers and invisible hunters: divination and masking among Masewal people in the northern highlands of Puebla, Mexico - Alessandro Questa; Chapter 8: The crossroads of time - Lydia Rodriguez and Sergio Lopez; Chapter 9: Cross-twins and outcestous marriages: how kinship (under)determines humanity for the K isedje of central Brazil - Marcela Coelho de Souza; Chapter 10: The curse of Souw among the Amazonian Enawene-nawe - Chloe Nahum-Claudel; Chapter 11 : Figure-ground dialectics in Yanomami, Yekuana and Piaroa myth and shamanism - Jose Antonio Kelly; Chapter 12: Commentary - Roy Wagner; Index.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781912385027
Publisert
2019-03-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Sean Kingston Publishing
Vekt
579 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, UU, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
286

Commentaries by

Om bidragsyterne

Pedro Pitarch (Editor) is Professor of Anthropology at the Universidad Complutense of Madrid. Jose Antonio Kelly (Editor) is Assistant Professor at the Univeridade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil. Roy Wagner was a professor in the Anthropology Department at the University of Virginia for the last forty years. His ethnographic work with Daribi and Barok peoples in Papua New Guinea and New Ireland, respectively,forms the base for his vast body of publications, comprising nine books, as well as many articles, on topics ranging from kinship and mythology to poststructural anthropology, ethnographic methodology and trickery, and fiction.Some of this work serves as the inspiration and guiding line of enquiry for this book.