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Selves in Time and Place: Identities, Experience, and History in Nepal
Contributor(s): Skinner, Debra (Editor), Pach, Alfred (Editor), Holland, Dorothy (Editor)
ISBN: 0847685985     ISBN-13: 9780847685981
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
OUR PRICE:   $160.38  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: July 1998
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- History | Asia - General
- Psychology
Dewey: 155.849
LCCN: 98018244
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6" W x 9" (1.27 lbs) 352 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
Recently anthropology has turned to accounts of persons-in-history/history-in-persons, focusing on how individuals and groups as agents both fashion and are fashioned by social, political, and cultural discourses and practices. In this approach, power, agency, and history are made explicit as individuals and groups work to constitute themselves in relation to others and within and against sociopolitical and historical contexts. Contributors to this volume extend this emphasis, drawing upon their ethnographic research in Nepal to examine closely how selves, identities, and experience are produced in dialogical relationships through time in a multi-ethic nation-state and within a discourse of nationalism. The diversity of peoples, recent political transformations, and nation-building efforts make Nepal an especially rich locale to examine people's struggles to define and position themselves. But the authors move beyond geographical boundaries to more theoretical terrain to problematicize the ways in which people recreate or contest certain identities and positions. Various authors explore how people-positioned by gender, ethnicity, and locale-use cultural genres to produce aspects of identities and experiences; they examine how subjectivities, agencies and cultural worlds co-develop and are shaped through engagement with cultural forms; and they portray the appropriation of multiple voices for self and group formation. As such, this collection offers a richly textured and complex accounting of the mutual constitution of selves and society.