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Mutual Subject-Discovery in Syrian Encounters

  • John Borneman
Published/Copyright: January 5, 2011
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Abstract

For anthropologists who engage in encounter-based fieldwork, contact zones have a peculiar phenomenal quality that is often neglected by scholars from other disciplines who have taken up the fieldwork paradigm initially developed by ethnographers. In this paper, I want to elaborate how, in my most recent fieldwork in Syria, I experienced such zones, and I want to reflect on this experience and its relation to concepts and writing as it becomes knowledge. I define fieldwork as “the registering of sensory impressions in a (temporal) process of mutual subject-discovery and critique,” and anthropology as a “mode of engagement in generating knowledge and social and political action that enables ongoing relationships” (Borneman/Hammoudi 2009: 19). This picture of fieldwork and ethnography, in its stress on the author being in “a zone of contact with the world he is depicting” (Bakhtin 1981: 30), is at odds with understandings that focus on anthropology as a “cultural critique” of the West (Marcus/Fischer 1986), “creative and usable mappings” (Gupta/Ferguson 1997: 56), “comparison of embedded concepts” between societies (Asad 2003: 17), or interpretation of another culture (Geertz 1973).

Published Online: 2011-01-05
Published in Print: 2010-12

© by Akademie Verlag, Princeton, NJ, Germany

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Editorial
  2. Performative Prozesse der Kulturbegegnung und des Kulturkontakts: Hybrider und paradoxer Modus
  3. Spielräume kultureller Kontakte im Roman des 16. Jahrhunderts: „Der Finckenritter“ (Straßburg 1560)
  4. Raum-Musik als Kontaktzone. Stockhausens Hymnen bei der Weltausstellung in Osaka 1970
  5. Performing the Self and Staging the Other: Scripting the Legend of Lucretia in Early Modern England
  6. Medienkulturelle Dialoge. Virtuell-interaktive Ethnoscapes
  7. “Striking the Right Note”: Thomas Dallam′s Negotiation of Alterity in Istanbul (1599)
  8. Kontaktzonen und der Körper des Anthropologen. Zu den Tagebuchaufzeichnungen und Briefen von Franz Boas und Bronislaw Malinowski
  9. Mutual Subject-Discovery in Syrian Encounters
  10. Theatricality in Ethnography at the World Trade Organization. The Para-Site as Experimental Form
  11. „On the Road Again“. Nomadentum, Zugehörigkeit und europäische Staatsbürgerschaft der Wagenburgen in Berlin
  12. Innerstädtische Schulen als Kontaktzonen und Orte transkultureller Begegnungen
  13. Pädagogische Potentiale von Kontaktzonen. Paradoxien und Irritationen einer schulischen Begegnung
  14. Kontaktzonen im Museum. Kindergruppen in der Ausstellung „Indianer Nordamerikas“
  15. Gesundheitsförderung als Kontaktzone. Eine chilenische Gemeindepsychiatrie für die Mapuche
  16. Sprachtod und Kontaktzone
  17. Beyond Ritual as Performance. Towards Ritual as Dynamics and Virtuality
  18. The Global Icon of the Indian IT-Professional. Contact Zones in the Age of New Media, Globalisation and World Society
  19. “It′s the Japans”. Kontaktzonen im Film zwischen Aneignung und Unverfügbarkeit
  20. Hyperbolé – Politik, Macht, Potenz
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