Living with Bad Surroundings – War, History, and Everyday Moments in Northern Uganda
Autor Sverker Finnströmen Limba Engleză Paperback – 19 feb 2008
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822341918
ISBN-10: 0822341913
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 8 photographs, 2 maps
Dimensiuni: 157 x 232 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 0822341913
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 8 photographs, 2 maps
Dimensiuni: 157 x 232 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Cuprins
Orientations: War and culture in Uganda; 1: Acholi worlds and the colonial encounter; 2: Neocolonial legacies and evolving war; 3: Rebel manifestos in context; 4: Displacements; 5: Wartime rumors and moral truths; 6: Uprooting the pumpkins; Reorientations: Unfinished realities
Recenzii
Riveting. Powerful. Evocative. Anthropology at its best. Sverker Finnström is a gifted researcher and writer: in his hands the Acoli become a lens for understanding very twenty-first-century forms of violence and survival. This is a book about one of the more destructive and bitter wars on the African continent and its global connections. But it is also a book about hope, about facing and overcoming crisesof every culture being all cultures in the opus of experience, of mango trees surviving the tides of war and global ignorance. About sorrow and laughter and moments of coevalness in northern Uganda and beyond. Carolyn Nordstrom, author of Global Outlaws: Crime, Money, and Power in the Contemporary World
Living with Bad Surroundings is a lucid, compelling, in-depth, and detailed exploration of the vexed position of youth in poverty-stricken Africa; a painstaking and authoritative account of one of the most refractory and long-running wars on that continent; and a demonstration of how imperative it is to complement historical and political-economic explanations of Africas conflicts with ethnographic perspectives that encompass local symbolic reality, local readings of history and tradition, local expectations and desires, and local understandings of power, morality, and reconciliation. Michael Jackson, author of In Sierra Leone
Finnström describes the complexity of living in a war zone where there is neither social order nor safety and where even the idea of peace is problematic since it never lasts long enough to allow the construction of any dependable relations or resources...Finnström listened to what concerned the Acholi he met and that was the issue of survival itself, both as it related to the present and how it could relate to what future Acholi may expect in war-torn Uganda...It is a narrative of violence, flight, loss, resettlement, poverty, misunderstanding, distrust, and disbelief, as well as of hope and survival. Through all the chaos, Acholi have survived and struggled to construct a reality and identity that will help them...Finnströms picture of contemporary Acholi life is grim, as is his picture of what the future holds for them. Yet he portrays Acholi as tenacious survivors, remarkably resourceful in making use of past traditions as well as new means to manage their lives...it is a readable and absorbing report of a chaotic, difficult, and dangerous part of Africa...I am glad I read it. I recommend it to anyone wanting to understand the problematical side of Africa. It reads more like the writing of a good and thoughtful war correspondent rather than a traditional social scientist. It is what is useful and appropriate for understanding the world of contemporary northern Ugandans whom the author clearly liked and cared about. T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos, The International Review of Anthropology and Linguistics, 2009
"Living with Bad Surroundings . . . [is] a very good book, perhaps the best written on northern Uganda since the 1970s. It will be an ideal text for courses dealing with Africa and the local realities of modern armed conflicts." - TLS, 26th March 2010" . . . a moving, intimate account of everyday life... a heartbreaking portrait" American Ethnologist
"Riveting. Powerful. Evocative. Anthropology at its best. Sverker Finnstrom is a gifted researcher and writer: in his hands the Acoli become a lens for understanding very twenty-first-century forms of violence and survival. This is a book about one of the more destructive and bitter wars on the African continent and its global connections. But it is also a book about hope, about facing and overcoming crises--of every culture being all cultures in the opus of experience, of mango trees surviving the tides of war and global ignorance. About sorrow and laughter and moments of coevalness in northern Uganda and beyond." Carolyn Nordstrom, author of Global Outlaws: Crime, Money, and Power in the Contemporary World "Living with Bad Surroundings is a lucid, compelling, in-depth, and detailed exploration of the vexed position of youth in poverty-stricken Africa; a painstaking and authoritative account of one of the most refractory and long-running wars on that continent; and a demonstration of how imperative it is to complement historical and political-economic explanations of Africa's conflicts with ethnographic perspectives that encompass local symbolic reality, local readings of history and tradition, local expectations and desires, and local understandings of power, morality, and reconciliation." Michael Jackson, author of In Sierra Leone "Finnstrom describes the complexity of living in a war zone where there is neither social order nor safety and where even the idea of peace is problematic since it never lasts long enough to allow the construction of any dependable relations or resources...Finnstrom listened to what concerned the Acholi he met and that was the issue of survival itself, both as it related to the present and how it could relate to what future Acholi may expect in war-torn Uganda...It is a narrative of violence, flight, loss, resettlement, poverty, misunderstanding, distrust, and disbelief, as well as of hope and survival. Through all the chaos, Acholi have survived and struggled to construct a reality and identity that will help them...Finnstrom's picture of contemporary Acholi life is grim, as is his picture of what the future holds for them. Yet he portrays Acholi as tenacious survivors, remarkably resourceful in making use of past traditions as well as new means to manage their lives...it is a readable and absorbing report of a chaotic, difficult, and dangerous part of Africa...I am glad I read it. I recommend it to anyone wanting to understand the problematical side of Africa. It reads more like the writing of a good and thoughtful war correspondent rather than a traditional social scientist. It is what is useful and appropriate for understanding the world of contemporary northern Ugandans whom the author clearly liked and cared about." -T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos, The International Review of Anthropology and Linguistics, 2009 "Living with Bad Surroundings ... [is] a very good book, perhaps the best written on northern Uganda since the 1970s. It will be an ideal text for courses dealing with Africa and the local realities of modern armed conflicts." - TLS, 26th March 2010 " ... a moving, intimate account of everyday life... a heartbreaking portrait" American Ethnologist
Living with Bad Surroundings is a lucid, compelling, in-depth, and detailed exploration of the vexed position of youth in poverty-stricken Africa; a painstaking and authoritative account of one of the most refractory and long-running wars on that continent; and a demonstration of how imperative it is to complement historical and political-economic explanations of Africas conflicts with ethnographic perspectives that encompass local symbolic reality, local readings of history and tradition, local expectations and desires, and local understandings of power, morality, and reconciliation. Michael Jackson, author of In Sierra Leone
Finnström describes the complexity of living in a war zone where there is neither social order nor safety and where even the idea of peace is problematic since it never lasts long enough to allow the construction of any dependable relations or resources...Finnström listened to what concerned the Acholi he met and that was the issue of survival itself, both as it related to the present and how it could relate to what future Acholi may expect in war-torn Uganda...It is a narrative of violence, flight, loss, resettlement, poverty, misunderstanding, distrust, and disbelief, as well as of hope and survival. Through all the chaos, Acholi have survived and struggled to construct a reality and identity that will help them...Finnströms picture of contemporary Acholi life is grim, as is his picture of what the future holds for them. Yet he portrays Acholi as tenacious survivors, remarkably resourceful in making use of past traditions as well as new means to manage their lives...it is a readable and absorbing report of a chaotic, difficult, and dangerous part of Africa...I am glad I read it. I recommend it to anyone wanting to understand the problematical side of Africa. It reads more like the writing of a good and thoughtful war correspondent rather than a traditional social scientist. It is what is useful and appropriate for understanding the world of contemporary northern Ugandans whom the author clearly liked and cared about. T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos, The International Review of Anthropology and Linguistics, 2009
"Living with Bad Surroundings . . . [is] a very good book, perhaps the best written on northern Uganda since the 1970s. It will be an ideal text for courses dealing with Africa and the local realities of modern armed conflicts." - TLS, 26th March 2010" . . . a moving, intimate account of everyday life... a heartbreaking portrait" American Ethnologist
"Riveting. Powerful. Evocative. Anthropology at its best. Sverker Finnstrom is a gifted researcher and writer: in his hands the Acoli become a lens for understanding very twenty-first-century forms of violence and survival. This is a book about one of the more destructive and bitter wars on the African continent and its global connections. But it is also a book about hope, about facing and overcoming crises--of every culture being all cultures in the opus of experience, of mango trees surviving the tides of war and global ignorance. About sorrow and laughter and moments of coevalness in northern Uganda and beyond." Carolyn Nordstrom, author of Global Outlaws: Crime, Money, and Power in the Contemporary World "Living with Bad Surroundings is a lucid, compelling, in-depth, and detailed exploration of the vexed position of youth in poverty-stricken Africa; a painstaking and authoritative account of one of the most refractory and long-running wars on that continent; and a demonstration of how imperative it is to complement historical and political-economic explanations of Africa's conflicts with ethnographic perspectives that encompass local symbolic reality, local readings of history and tradition, local expectations and desires, and local understandings of power, morality, and reconciliation." Michael Jackson, author of In Sierra Leone "Finnstrom describes the complexity of living in a war zone where there is neither social order nor safety and where even the idea of peace is problematic since it never lasts long enough to allow the construction of any dependable relations or resources...Finnstrom listened to what concerned the Acholi he met and that was the issue of survival itself, both as it related to the present and how it could relate to what future Acholi may expect in war-torn Uganda...It is a narrative of violence, flight, loss, resettlement, poverty, misunderstanding, distrust, and disbelief, as well as of hope and survival. Through all the chaos, Acholi have survived and struggled to construct a reality and identity that will help them...Finnstrom's picture of contemporary Acholi life is grim, as is his picture of what the future holds for them. Yet he portrays Acholi as tenacious survivors, remarkably resourceful in making use of past traditions as well as new means to manage their lives...it is a readable and absorbing report of a chaotic, difficult, and dangerous part of Africa...I am glad I read it. I recommend it to anyone wanting to understand the problematical side of Africa. It reads more like the writing of a good and thoughtful war correspondent rather than a traditional social scientist. It is what is useful and appropriate for understanding the world of contemporary northern Ugandans whom the author clearly liked and cared about." -T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos, The International Review of Anthropology and Linguistics, 2009 "Living with Bad Surroundings ... [is] a very good book, perhaps the best written on northern Uganda since the 1970s. It will be an ideal text for courses dealing with Africa and the local realities of modern armed conflicts." - TLS, 26th March 2010 " ... a moving, intimate account of everyday life... a heartbreaking portrait" American Ethnologist
Notă biografică
Textul de pe ultima copertă
""Living with Bad Surroundings" is a lucid, compelling, in-depth, and detailed exploration of the vexed position of youth in poverty-stricken Africa; a painstaking and authoritative account of one of the most refractory and long-running wars on that continent; and a demonstration of how imperative it is to complement historical and political-economic explanations of Africa's conflicts with ethnographic perspectives that encompass local symbolic reality, local readings of history and tradition, local expectations and desires, and local understandings of power, morality, and reconciliation."--Michael Jackson, author of "In Sierra Leone"
Descriere
How Ugandans in a region ravaged by a brutal civil war (the Lords Resistance Army is from there) make sense of their lives