Wording the World

Wording the World

Veena Das and Scenes of Inheritance

  • Autor: Chatterji, Roma
  • Editor: Fordham University Press
  • Col·lecció: Forms of Living
  • ISBN: 9780823261857
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780823261888
  • eISBN Epub: 9780823261871
  • Lloc de publicació:  New York , United States
  • Any de publicació: 2014
  • Any de publicació digital: 2014
  • Mes: Desembre
  • Idioma: Anglés

The essays in this book explore the critical possibilities that have been opened by Veena Das’s work. Taking off from her writing on pain as a call for acknowledgment, several essays explore how social sciences render pain, suffering, and the claims of the other as part of an ethics of responsibility. They search for disciplinary resources to contest the implicit division between those whose pain receives attention and those whose pain is seen as out of sync with the times and hence written out of the historical record.

Another theme is the co-constitution of the event and the everyday, especially in the context of violence. Das’s groundbreaking formulation of the everyday provides a frame for understanding how both violence and healing might grow out of it. Drawing on notions of life and voice and the struggle to write one’s own narrative, the contributors provide rich ethnographies of what it is to inhabit a devastated world.

Ethics as a form of attentiveness to the other, especially in the context of poverty, deprivation, and the corrosion of everyday life, appears in several of the essays. They take up the classic themes of kinship and obligation but give them entirely new meaning.

Finally, anthropology’s affinities with the literary are reflected in a final set of essays that show how forms of knowing in art and in anthropology are related through work with painters, performance artists, and writers.

  • Cover
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1. Conversations, Generations, Genres: Anthropological Knowing as a Form of Life
  • 2. Ethnography in the Time of Martyrs: History and Pain in Current Anthropological Practice
  • 3. Pedagogies of the Clinic: Learning to Live (Again and Again)
  • 4. Disembodied Conjugality
  • 5. Word, Image, and Movement: Translating Pain
  • 6. Conceptual Vita
  • 7. The Child Bears Witness: Menace, Despair, and Hope in a Courtroom
  • 8. Experiments with Fate: Buddhist Morality and Human Rights in Thailand
  • 9. Communitas and Recovered Life: Suffering and Recovery in the Sikh Carnage of 1984
  • 10. Sexual Violence, Law, and Qualities of Affiliation
  • 11. On Feelings and Finiteness in Everyday Life
  • 12. “Listening to Voices”: Immigrants, Settlers, and Citizens at the Ethnic Margins of the State
  • 13. Punjabi Inscriptions of Kinship and Gender: Sayings and Songs
  • 14. In the Event of an Anthropological Thought
  • 15. The Ayodhya Dispute: Law’s Imagination and the Functions of the Status Quo
  • 16. The Death of Nature in the Era of Global Warming
  • 17. Triste Romantik: Ruminations on an Ethnographic Encounter with Philosophy
  • 18. Making Claims to Tradition: Poetics and Politics in the Works of Young Maithil Painters
  • 19. The Mirror as Frame: Time and Narrative in the Folk Art of Bengal
  • 20. Adjacent Thinking: A Postscript
  • 21. Between Words and Lives. A Thought on the Coming Together of Margins, Violence, and Suffering: An Interview with Veena Das
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • List of Contributors
  • Index
    • A
    • B
    • C
    • D
    • E
    • F
    • G
    • H
    • I
    • J
    • K
    • L
    • M
    • N
    • O
    • P
    • R
    • S
    • T
    • U
    • V
    • W
    • Y
    • Z