A series of debates in anthropology and other disciplines since the 1980s has raised questions of area studies, comparison, and 'the field' in relation to the production of ethnographic knowledge. In search of a concrete framework within which to extend these debates, participants in this special issue of Anthropological Forum bring together research on Southeast Asia and the Caribbean: the 'East Indies' and the 'West Indies'. This introductory paper examines how such a novel paradigm for ethnographic analysis might contribute to new geographic imaginaries in anthropology. © 2006 Copyright Discipline of Anthropology and Sociology, The University of Western Australia
Although the field of island studies has from the start regarded itself as a defender of islands and...
The key question for many anthropologists and historians today is not whether to cross the boundary ...
This special issue brings together cultural studies of media with current themes in Caribbean studie...
A series of debates in anthropology and other disciplines since the 1980s has raised questions of ar...
In this paper, I work to rethink notions of comparison and area studies by viewing my ethnographic w...
This article addresses the question, is there such an entity as a separate field of the anthropology...
This thesis absorbs and reflects on Choiseul Island responses and caution towards the making of anth...
At a time when the frontiers separating the traditional scientific and scholarly disciplines are bei...
This article analyses how physical anthropologists created scientific circuits between the Netherlan...
This paper explores a mobile anthropological method, or what I call an archipelagic ethnography. Thi...
In their study on "The modern anthropology of Southeast Asia", Victor King and William Wilder raise ...
What is the agenda of Melanesianist anthropology in the era of globalization? I advocate thinking of...
The aim of this course is to introduce students to the major concepts and debates in the\ud field of...
[First paragraph] Roots of Jamaican Culture. MERVYN C. ALLEYNE. London: Pluto Press, 1988. xii ...
In recent years, crucial questions have been raised about anthropology as a discipline, such as whet...
Although the field of island studies has from the start regarded itself as a defender of islands and...
The key question for many anthropologists and historians today is not whether to cross the boundary ...
This special issue brings together cultural studies of media with current themes in Caribbean studie...
A series of debates in anthropology and other disciplines since the 1980s has raised questions of ar...
In this paper, I work to rethink notions of comparison and area studies by viewing my ethnographic w...
This article addresses the question, is there such an entity as a separate field of the anthropology...
This thesis absorbs and reflects on Choiseul Island responses and caution towards the making of anth...
At a time when the frontiers separating the traditional scientific and scholarly disciplines are bei...
This article analyses how physical anthropologists created scientific circuits between the Netherlan...
This paper explores a mobile anthropological method, or what I call an archipelagic ethnography. Thi...
In their study on "The modern anthropology of Southeast Asia", Victor King and William Wilder raise ...
What is the agenda of Melanesianist anthropology in the era of globalization? I advocate thinking of...
The aim of this course is to introduce students to the major concepts and debates in the\ud field of...
[First paragraph] Roots of Jamaican Culture. MERVYN C. ALLEYNE. London: Pluto Press, 1988. xii ...
In recent years, crucial questions have been raised about anthropology as a discipline, such as whet...
Although the field of island studies has from the start regarded itself as a defender of islands and...
The key question for many anthropologists and historians today is not whether to cross the boundary ...
This special issue brings together cultural studies of media with current themes in Caribbean studie...