Outsider Within: Reworking Anthropology in the Global Age
by Faye V Harrison
University of Illinois Press, 2007 Cloth: 978-0-252-03261-5 | Paper: 978-0-252-07490-5 Library of Congress Classification GN345.H43 2008 Dewey Decimal Classification 306
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Outsider Within presents an approach to critically reconstructing the anthropology discipline to better encompass issues of gender and race. Among the nine key changes to the field that Faye V. Harrison advocates are researching in an ethically and politically responsible manner, promoting greater diversity in the discipline, rethinking theory, and committing to a genuine multicultural dialogue. In drawing from materials developed during her distinguished twenty-five year career in Caribbean and African American studies, Harrison analyzes anthropology’s limits and possibilities from an African American woman’s perspective, while also recognizing similarities between peoples, despite social, cultural, and political differences. In seeking to productively engage anthropologists of diverse geographical, cultural, and national origins, Harrison challenges them to work together to transcend stark gender, racial, and national hierarchies.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Faye V. Harrison is a professor in the African American studies program and department of anthropology, University of Florida, and editor of Resisting Racism and Xenophobia: Global Perspectives on Race, Gender, and Human Rights. In 2004, she won the Society for the Anthropology of North America Prize for Distinguished Achievement in the Critical Study of North America.
REVIEWS
"This book is intellectually stimulating and insightful, and its ideas are presented with intensity and passion. Harrison clearly relishes her engagement in the anthropology profession, but she also argues that her field must be transformed if it is to have any meaningful input into twenty-first-century scholarship. One of the most gifted and profound writers in anthropology today, it is imperative that her corpus of materials be shared."--Audrey Smedley, professor emerita of anthropology, Virginia Commonwealth University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Toward a Critical Anthropology of Anthropology
1. Reworking Anthropology from the "Outside Within"
Part II. Rehistoricizing Anthropology
2. Unburying Theory, Repositioning Practice:
Anthropological Praxis in Peripheral Predicaments
3. Remapping Routes, Unearthing Roots: Rethinking Caribbean
Connections with the U.S. South
Part III. Engaging Interlocutors in Interdisciplinary Dialogue
4. Writing against the Grain: Cultural Politics of
Difference in Alice Walker's Fiction
5. Probing the Legacy of Empire: Reflexive Notes on
Caribbeanist Gordon K. Lewis
Part IV. The Power of Ethnography, the Ethnography of Power
6. Gangs, Politics, and Dilemmas of Global Restructuring in
Jamaica
7. The Gendered Violence of Structural Adjustment
Part V. Structural Violence Here and There in the Global Era
8. Everyday Neoliberalism in Cuba: A Glimpse from Jamaica
9. Global Apartheid at Home and Abroad
10. Justice for All: The Challenges of Advocacy Research in
the Global Age
Part VI. Blurring Boundaries between Academia and the World
Beyond
11. Teaching Philosophy
12. Academia, the Free Market, and New Voices of Diversity
13. A Labor of Love: An Emancipated Woman's Legacy
Notes and References
Index
Outsider Within: Reworking Anthropology in the Global Age
by Faye V Harrison
University of Illinois Press, 2007 Cloth: 978-0-252-03261-5 Paper: 978-0-252-07490-5
Outsider Within presents an approach to critically reconstructing the anthropology discipline to better encompass issues of gender and race. Among the nine key changes to the field that Faye V. Harrison advocates are researching in an ethically and politically responsible manner, promoting greater diversity in the discipline, rethinking theory, and committing to a genuine multicultural dialogue. In drawing from materials developed during her distinguished twenty-five year career in Caribbean and African American studies, Harrison analyzes anthropology’s limits and possibilities from an African American woman’s perspective, while also recognizing similarities between peoples, despite social, cultural, and political differences. In seeking to productively engage anthropologists of diverse geographical, cultural, and national origins, Harrison challenges them to work together to transcend stark gender, racial, and national hierarchies.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Faye V. Harrison is a professor in the African American studies program and department of anthropology, University of Florida, and editor of Resisting Racism and Xenophobia: Global Perspectives on Race, Gender, and Human Rights. In 2004, she won the Society for the Anthropology of North America Prize for Distinguished Achievement in the Critical Study of North America.
REVIEWS
"This book is intellectually stimulating and insightful, and its ideas are presented with intensity and passion. Harrison clearly relishes her engagement in the anthropology profession, but she also argues that her field must be transformed if it is to have any meaningful input into twenty-first-century scholarship. One of the most gifted and profound writers in anthropology today, it is imperative that her corpus of materials be shared."--Audrey Smedley, professor emerita of anthropology, Virginia Commonwealth University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Toward a Critical Anthropology of Anthropology
1. Reworking Anthropology from the "Outside Within"
Part II. Rehistoricizing Anthropology
2. Unburying Theory, Repositioning Practice:
Anthropological Praxis in Peripheral Predicaments
3. Remapping Routes, Unearthing Roots: Rethinking Caribbean
Connections with the U.S. South
Part III. Engaging Interlocutors in Interdisciplinary Dialogue
4. Writing against the Grain: Cultural Politics of
Difference in Alice Walker's Fiction
5. Probing the Legacy of Empire: Reflexive Notes on
Caribbeanist Gordon K. Lewis
Part IV. The Power of Ethnography, the Ethnography of Power
6. Gangs, Politics, and Dilemmas of Global Restructuring in
Jamaica
7. The Gendered Violence of Structural Adjustment
Part V. Structural Violence Here and There in the Global Era
8. Everyday Neoliberalism in Cuba: A Glimpse from Jamaica
9. Global Apartheid at Home and Abroad
10. Justice for All: The Challenges of Advocacy Research in
the Global Age
Part VI. Blurring Boundaries between Academia and the World
Beyond
11. Teaching Philosophy
12. Academia, the Free Market, and New Voices of Diversity
13. A Labor of Love: An Emancipated Woman's Legacy
Notes and References
Index
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC