Decolonizing Anthropology: Moving Further Toward an Anthropology for LiberationFaye Venetia Harrison |
Contents
Man and Nature White and Other | 15 |
Personal Political Theoretical | 68 |
Ethnography as Politics | 88 |
Copyright | |
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activities African American Anthropological Association analysis Black Butetown capitalist Cardiff cargo cult Cargo-cult discourse churches Clifford colonial consciousness construction context Creole critical critique cross-cultural cultural anthropology decolonized decolonized anthropology discipline discussion domination economic elites ethnographic European experience feminist field fieldwork Fourth World gender ghetto groups Guinea Gulf War Harrison hegemony historical Howard Spring Huizer Hymes ideas ideology Indian indigenous inequality institutions intellectual Jamaican Kabu Pain knowledge labor London Magubane Marcus military millenarian Miskitu Miskitu communities Miskitu political missionaries MISURASATA movement narrative native Nicaragua North American Oceanview oppression organization Papua New Guineans participation perspective postmodernism privileged problems production questions race racial racism realist reflexive relations relationship religious responsibility role Sandinista social societies Somoza Spring's strategies structural struggle theoretical theory Third World Tiger Bay traditional transformation U.S. government U.S. hegemony University Press Western women Writing Culture York