The devil’s in the detail: Consequences, intent, and moral futures in anthropology
HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
Some of the most recent articles from open access anthropology journals (beta)
HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
This paper presents coproduced ethnographic material concerning the development of mental healthcare services in Oxfordshire, UK. Our collaborative working method highlights arbitrary events and connections in both individual lives and in the lives of …
HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
The anthropology of morality continues to be met with resistance. Opposition rests on the perception that one cannot study morals without moralizing or advocating which makes it both epistemologically and professionally questionable. This blinkered vie…
This essay looks at Hindu nationalism’s investment in a crisis machine linked closely to digital media networks in India. Media infrastructures have provided right-wing populism with new techniques for performative action and network-driven collective …
While recent amendments to India’s Citizenship Act are designed to exclude Muslims from claims to citizenship in India, this essay seeks to problematize the assumption that Hindu migrants who seek citizenship under the new Act are incorporated seamless…
This article explores the remaking of ideas of the “ordinary citizen” in India in the context of Hindu majoritarian politics and changing relationships between the state and private capital. Focusing on one of India’s largest privately developed townsh…
This article locates the unique discursive contribution of women’s protests against India’s Citizen Amendment Act in 2019–2020 in the history of Muslim identity formation in South Asia. It does this by reviewing the relationship between religious refor…
In this article I look at the responses of Indians to political events in 2019 regarding the abrogation of Article 370 concerning Kashmir in the Constitution of India and the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA). The critiques of abrogation as well as of th…
At the same time as, in Paris, Lucien Lévy-Bruhl experimented with the concept of “participation,” at Harvard, William James undertook a parallel trajectory by taking recourse to the notion of “the vague.” For him, vagueness described the fact that rea…
This article maps out the relationship between the academic/intellectual work and political positioning of a Muslim researcher in contemporary India. It is divided into three parts. In the first part, I raise conceptual and methodological questions, es…
The advent of Malinowski’s ethnographic theory is inscribed in a wider modernist environment, which set the ground for the emergence of new epistemological projects. Viktor Shklovsky’s attempt to inaugurate a scientific study of literature was one of t…
In two recent themed collections in this publication, numerous contributors have explored the term and concept of “life” in its relationship to ethnographic theory. This article seeks to uncover a historical precedent for this constellation. More preci…
Missionary encounters stimulate cultural change, although not always in ways one might expect. Throughout the mid-twentieth century, among missionaries from the Assemblies of God (AG), the world’s largest pentecostal group, encounters with postcolonial…
Arguing in favor of anthropology’s humanity-centered research tradition, this article examines how the encounter with human remains on the bedrock of retreating glaciers shapes not only the notion of divinity and power underpinning Andean pilgrimage bu…
What are the current trends in the study of witchcraft in Africa? Twenty years ago, the “modernity of witchcraft” approach was very influential. Although key texts from that framework are still often cited, its heyday seems to have passed. This overvie…
In anthropology, antinomy has generally been conceived negatively, metaphorically, and within the limits of epistemology alone. In presenting the ontology of the Sepik people of Awim, which is drawn from their conceptions of and practices related to fo…
HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory
The protests against the CAA (Citizenship Amendment Act) and a nationwide NRC (National Register of Citizens) have emerged as an important challenge against right-wing majoritarianism in India. These protests frame themselves as part of a struggle to s…
The Currents section foregrounds the work of Indian scholars who examine the ramifications of state responses and counterresponses regarding the Citizenship (Amendment) Act in December 2019. This amendment to the Constitution of India granted citizensh…
Presentamos la interpretación sobre actores, tiempos, paisajes y corporalidad involucrados en celebraciones rituales desarrolladas en la “Peña del Medio” para el período Tardío-Inca en la localidad de Paicuqui, Antofagasta de la Sierra, Catamarca (Arge…
El trabajo propone una invitación para recorrer la relación entre los contextos rituales, entendidos como dispositivos de intensificación tendientes a la consolidación comunitaria, y los procesos de re-etnización. Estos rituales pueden llegar a reducir…
En este trabajo se presenta el sitio Chañarmuyo 2 que, de acuerdo a sus características formales, escala, ubicuidad, visibilización, visualización y monumentalidad, habría actuado como un espacio público destinado al culto a los nevados de la Sierra de…
En este artículo discutiremos las prácticas de comensalidad diaguita e inca en torno a la plataforma ushnu de Guitián (valle Calchaquí norte, Salta, Argentina). Las excavaciones que llevamos adelante en el interior de la plataforma nos permitieron iden…
Esta investigación explora el paisaje de la protesta a través de las intervenciones gráficas realizadas durante las manifestaciones del estallido social de octubre del 2019 en Plaza Baquedano, Santiago. A partir de técnicas proporcionadas por la arqueo…