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Anthropology, Politics, and the State
Democracy and Violence in South Asia

A powerful analysis of how anthropology can help us to understand other people's politics, first published in 2007.

Jonathan Spencer (Author)

9780521771771, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 19 July 2007

218 pages, 5 b/w illus.
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.46 kg

'Spencer, a professor of anthropology at Edinburgh, makes a good case, drawing heavily on a wide reading of anthropological theory, a sprinkling of comparative South Asian case studies, and a strong dose of his own Sri Lanka-focused expertise. Anthropology, Politics and the State is a valuable reminder of the importance of scepticism in research, and of the crucial role primary fieldwork plays.' Alexander Evans, Contemporary South Asia

In recent years anthropology has rediscovered its interest in politics. Building on the findings of this research, this book, first published in 2007, analyses the relationship between culture and politics, with special attention to democracy, nationalism, the state and political violence. Beginning with scenes from an unruly early 1980s election campaign in Sri Lanka, it covers issues from rural policing in north India to slum housing in Delhi, presenting arguments about secularism and pluralism, and the ambiguous energies released by electoral democracy across the subcontinent. It ends by discussing feminist peace activists in Sri Lanka, struggling to sustain a window of shared humanity after two decades of war. Bringing together and linking the themes of democracy, identity and conflict, this important new study shows how anthropology can take a central role in understanding other people's politics, especially the issues that seem to have divided the world since 9/11.

1. The strange death of political anthropology
2. Locating the political
3. Culture, nation and misery
4. Performing democracy
5. The state and self-making
6. The state and violence
7. Pluralism in theory, pluralism in practice
8. Politics and counter-politics.

Subject Areas: Political ideologies [JPF], Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography [JHMC], Anthropology [JHM], Black & Asian studies [JFSL3]

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