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In the shadow of history : the passing of lineage society / Andrew P. Davidson.

Penn Museum Library HC835 .D38 1996
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Davidson, Andrew Parks.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Economic anthropology.
Kinship.
Households.
Nuba Mountains (Sudan)--Economic conditions--Case studies.
Nuba Mountains (Sudan).
Households--Sudan--Nuba Mountains--Case studies.
Kinship--Sudan--Nuba Mountains--Case studies.
Economic anthropology--Sudan--Nuba Mountains--Case studies.
Sudan--Nuba Mountains.
Physical Description:
xvi, 328 pages : map ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
New Brunswick, NJ : Transaction Publishers, [1996]
Summary:
The spread of modernity throughout the non-Western world has had transformative effects not only on governments and economies but on the lives of individuals as well. The constraints and opportunities of modernization inevitably lead to the breakdown and supplanting of older social relations and livelihoods. In this volume Andrew P. Davidson examines the Nuba Mountain region of western Sudan to show how individuals and families struggle to maintain or expand their well-being in the face of continuous uncertainty, when control of their destinies is increasingly slipping out of the comforting confines of the village. Davidson offers a comparative and historical examination of economic life in three villages in order to better understand the capacities and limitations that ultimately condition what people can and cannot do. He shows how the older lineage system based on communalism, kinship, and age-based hierarchy is being displaced by new forces of social organization and individual orientation which have eroded village cohesion and left the Nuba vulnerable to the Islamic-dominated government in Khartoum and the ravages of the continuing Sudanese civil war. In its combination of empirical analysis, ethnographic fieldwork, and theoretical inquiry In the Shadow of History reconceptualizes development in such a way that the dynamics of historical transformation are made clear. This study in the classic anthropological tradition will be a valuable resource for anthropologists, economists, historians, and Africa area specialists.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 313-321) and index.
ISBN:
1560002301
OCLC:
33048242

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