âJackson . . . demonstrates, supremely, the deep understanding that can emerge from a long career of anthropological engagement and the artistry with which insight into the human condition can be delivered.â - Nigel Rapport, <i>Social Anthropology</i>
âJackson strives to do what few anthropologists have done, certainly not as determinedly: to allow the potential wisdom that lies ever more deeply buried in anthropologyâs routine formulations to come to the fore.â - Vincent Crapanzano, <i>Current Anthropology</i>
â<i>Excursions</i> may cross genres, venturing into the poetic and the literary, but, in my view this makes it all the more powerful as a work of anthropology â<br />beautifully and compellingly written, absorbing reading, it fulfils its promise of opening up anthropology to the rich possibilities of âepiphanyâ and âeventâ, and suggesting new ways of thinking about phenomena, âeven though these may entail no causal explanation or certain knowledgeâ (p. xv).â - Julie Scott, <i>Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute</i>
âThere is an egalitarian spirit running through the essays, mixing the thought of Adorno, Arendt, and Benjamin with that of Kuranko storytellers or<br />Maori mythology, and these with Jacksonâs first person narrative, such that each is brought to illuminate the other. Travel writing, yes, but travel writing reaching for universality. Anthropology, yes, but anthropology reaching for universality. . . . Jacksonâs arguments, although borne lightly by a filigree of close observation of singular experiences, are as weighty as those of many illustrious forebears.â - Michael Carrithers, <i>American Ethnologist</i>
â<i>Excursions</i> may cross genres, venturing into the poetic and the literary, but, in my view this makes it all the more powerful as a work of anthropologyâbeautifully and compellingly written, absorbing reading, it fulfills its promise of opening up anthropology to the rich possibilities of âepiphanyâ and âeventâ, and suggesting new ways of thinking about phenomena. . .â - Julie Scott, <i>Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute</i>
âExcursions is another beautifully meandering meditation from a grand wanderer in the landscape of contemporary anthropology. Michael Jackson knows about deep ethnography, having done his fair share of it with admirable verve. But he is more unique among anthropologists in his courage to engage fleeting everyday fragments of the here and there, and to mine the ephemera of momentary experience for their deep resonances with core existential questions.ââSteven Feld, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Music, The University of New Mexico
âMichael Jackson has long been recognized as one of our liveliest and most powerful thinkers, a scholar who engages with the phenomenaâhuman, cultural, historical, interactiveâat the core of cultural anthropology. With this remarkable book, he makes a significant contribution to current and future discussions about the hallmarks, trajectory, and promise of our field.ââDon Brenneis, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Cruz
âNovelist, poet, and extraordinary ethnographer, Michael Jackson has built a life around excursions and conversations in Africa, the South Pacific, Europe, and North America. The upshot is a book rich in existential insights, Continental philosophy grounded in local worlds, and painterly perceptions of the multiple ways that nature expresses human feelings and values. The chapter on Walter Benjamin is brilliantly executed as are those on Sierra Leonian and Maori friends. Walk with Jackson down these very different roads and he will bewitch you into seeing and feeling life come alive as it really is livedâlives of others and magically your own as well. A beautiful work.ââArthur Kleinman, Professor of Anthropology and Psychiatry, Harvard University
â<i>Excursions</i> may cross genres, venturing into the poetic and the literary, but, in my view this makes it all the more powerful as a work of anthropologyâbeautifully and compellingly written, absorbing reading, it fulfills its promise of opening up anthropology to the rich possibilities of âepiphanyâ and âeventâ, and suggesting new ways of thinking about phenomena. . .â
- Julie Scott, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
âJackson . . . demonstrates, supremely, the deep understanding that can emerge from a long career of anthropological engagement and the artistry with which insight into the human condition can be delivered.â
- Nigel Rapport, Social Anthropology
âJackson strives to do what few anthropologists have done, certainly not as determinedly: to allow the potential wisdom that lies ever more deeply buried in anthropologyâs routine formulations to come to the fore.â
- Vincent Crapanzano, Current Anthropology
âThere is an egalitarian spirit running through the essays, mixing the thought of Adorno, Arendt, and Benjamin with that of Kuranko storytellers or Maori mythology, and these with Jacksonâs first person narrative, such that each is brought to illuminate the other. Travel writing, yes, but travel writing reaching for universality. Anthropology, yes, but anthropology reaching for universality. . . . Jacksonâs arguments, although borne lightly by a filigree of close observation of singular experiences, are as weighty as those of many illustrious forebears.â
- Michael Carrithers, American Ethnologist
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Michael Jackson is Distinguished Visiting Professor in World Religions at Harvard Divinity School. His many books of anthropology include Existential Anthropology: Events, Exigencies, and Effects; In Sierra Leone; and At Home in the World. The latter two are both also published by Duke University Press. He is the author of The Accidental Anthropologist: A Memoir; six books of poetry including, most recently, Dead Reckoning; and two novels.