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Systemic Culture Shock

Meeting Fu Lai Ming on the Tibetan Plateau
  • Naomi C. F. Yamada
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At Home and in the Field
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch At Home and in the Field
© University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu

© University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Preface xi
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Part 1.Real Encounters:Predicaments of Ethnographic Fieldwork
  6. Introduction 5
  7. Tempting the Nāga 7
  8. An Anthropologist Behaving Badly 12
  9. Attacked in the Field 18
  10. A Question of Permission in Pohnpei 24
  11. Grandmothers, Sharks, and Other Dangerous Things 29
  12. Part 2. Meaningful Encounters:Learning, Representing, Engaging the Field
  13. Introduction 39
  14. Fieldwork as Transformative Experience 41
  15. Fieldwork on Two Wheels in Hanoi, Vietnam, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Enjoy the Ride 47
  16. The Cultural Power of Robots in Japan 56
  17. Encountering Maoist Propaganda in Pastoral Inner Mongolia 63
  18. When the Field is Your Home 70
  19. Part 3.Language Encounters:Voices, Discourse, Digital Practice
  20. Introduction 79
  21. Systemic Culture Shock 81
  22. Shóón Pakin, Sóóu Tittilap 87
  23. Talking with the Moai on Easter Island 93
  24. Blogging in Papua New Guinea 100
  25. Part 4. Identity Encounters:Gender, Ethnicity, Nationality
  26. Introduction 109
  27. Prostitutes, Menstrual Blood, Minor-Wives, and Feeding the Ducks 111
  28. Manning Up 118
  29. Contested Belonging of North Korean Refugees in South Korea 124
  30. “You Filipino, Ya?” 132
  31. Part 5. Close Encounters:Marriage, Kinship, Social Networks
  32. Introduction 141
  33. Sorry, Wrong Number! 143
  34. The Invisible Firewalker 149
  35. “You Can Do It, Japan!” 155
  36. Head Candy/Gut Connection 162
  37. Part 6. Economic Encounters:Class, Development, Inequality
  38. Introduction 173
  39. Tales of the Talā (Dollar) 175
  40. Working-Class Hospitality and Etiquette in a Bowl of Rāmen Noodles in Tokyo, Japan 184
  41. Entering Moloka‘I Hawaiian Style 190
  42. Part 7.Green Encounters:Environment, Sustainability, Restoration
  43. Introduction 199
  44. From Nuclear Exodus to Cultural Reawakening 201
  45. “They Came For Nature” 209
  46. The Forest of Contradictions 216
  47. He‘Eia Kūpuna Mapping Workshops 222
  48. Part 8. Political Encounters:Power, Conflict, Resistance
  49. Introduction 231
  50. Narratives of the Vulval Curse in Bontok and Kalinga, Philippines 233
  51. Digitalizing the Wantok System in West Papua 240
  52. Embattled Stories of Occupied Hawai‘i 246
  53. Ta‘Aroa is Great, Good and Mā‘Ohi 253
  54. Part 9. Deep Encounters:Worldview, Religion, Spiritual Practices
  55. Introduction 263
  56. Tiptoeing among the Knowledge of the Bodies and the Bodies of Knowledge in Tonga 265
  57. Being and Time in Nagasaki, Japan 272
  58. Losing My Mind and Loving Mosquitoes, Crickets, and Other Jungle Inhabitants 278
  59. “Papa! What’s Money?” 285
  60. Epilogue 294
  61. Bibliography 299
  62. List of Contributors 317
  63. Index 323
Heruntergeladen am 22.9.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780824855543-016/html
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