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Social Anthropology

Anthropologie sociale

ISSN: 0964-0282 (print) • ISSN: 1469-8676 (online) • 4 issues per year

Volume 23 Issue 2

Clean people, unclean people

The essentialisation of ‘slaves’ among the southern Betsileo of Madagascar

Denis Regnier

In this article I argue that among the southern Betsileo slave descendants are essentialised by free descendants. After explaining how this striking case of psychological essentialism manifests in the local context, I provide experimental evidence for it and discuss the results of three cognitive tasks that I ran in the field. I then suggest that slaves were not essentialised in the pre‐colonial era and contend that the essentialist construal only became entrenched in the aftermath of the 1896 abolition of slavery, which paradoxically triggered the historical process of essentialisation.

Transsingularities

The cognitive foundations of shamanism in Northern Asia

Charles Stépanoff

In Tuva (Southern Siberia), people expect that each class of beings contains singular individuals that distinguish themselves by atypical bodily and behavioural features and capacities. Among humans, such beings are shamans, but Tuvans also identify shamans among animals and trees. Even in the landscape, some atypical places are strong personalities. I call ‘transsingularity’ the supposed relationship that connects all these singular beings across their different classes. This treatment of atypical beings, which is widespread among Northern Asian traditions, is based on a ‘singularity detection device’, an inferential schema that links individuality and categorial norm in a specific way. This cognitive device sheds light on representations about metamorphosis as well as on interactional strategies between clients and shamans. The singularity detection device, as opposed to categorial thinking, appears to be at the foundation of Northern Asian shamanism. Finally I suggest that it may also play a role in animist cosmologies in other regions of the world.

Akman, Haci (ed.) 2014. Negotiating identity in Scandinavia: women, migration and the diaspora. New York: Berghahn Books. 208 pp. Hb.: US$47.45. ISBN: 978-1782383062.

Lydia Shanklin Roll

Black, Rachel E. 2012. Porta Palazzo. The Anthropology of an Italian Market. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 240 pp. Hb.: $49.95, ISBN: 978-0812244069.

Cristiana Panella

Questioning the scope and audience of anthropology

Catherine Allerton

Human cognition is intrinsically social, developmental and historical

Tim Ingold

Why cognitive anthropology needs to understand social interaction and its mediation

Webb Keane

Reflections on meta‐representations

Susanne Küchler

Anthropology and the non‐natural properties of human nature

Relax and enjoy them

Richard A. Shweder

The mutual challenge of anthropology and cognitive science

Andrea BenderSieghard Beller

Introduction

Denis RegnierRita Astuti

Must cognitive anthropology be mentalistic? Moving towards a relational ontology of social reality

Laurence KaufmannFabrice Clément

The of cognitive science

Susan Carey

Cognitive science and the cultural challenge

Susan A. GelmanSteven O. Roberts

Children make good anthropologists

Paul Harris

Abandoning the ‘theoretical apartheid’ between nature and nurture

Human infants hold the key

Sandra R. Waxman

A non‐essentialist theory of race

The case of an Afro‐indigenous village in northern Peru

Tamara Hale

In the village of Yapatera, Peru, there exists a folk theory of race which posits that humans cannot be divided into mutually exclusive racial groups and that personhood is both physiologically and socially ‘mixed’. By engaging with the psychological literature on racial essentialism (i.e. the tendency to view humans in terms of discrete categories, as if they were natural kinds), this article digs deeper into the local folk theory of race. Experimental tasks were designed to test the inductive potential of race and revealed that villagers are far more likely to use other social categories (class, religion, kinship and place of origins) than race to base their inferences. The article discusses the use of experimental tasks as a vehicle for a different sort of conversation between ethnographer and informants.

What is the challenge?

Maurice Bloch

Argyrou, Vassos. 2013. The gift of European thought and the cost of living. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. 148 pp. Hb.: US$66.67. ISBN: 978-1782380177.

Marian Viorel Anastasoaie

Besky, Sarah. 2014. The Darjeeling distinction. Labor and justice on fair‐trade tea plantations in India. Berkeley: University of California Press. 233 pp. Pb.: US$29.95. ISBN: 978‐0‐520‐27739‐7.

Saee Haldule

Bollig, Michael, Michael Schnegg and Hans‐Peter Wotzka. 2013. Pastoralism in Africa. Past, present and future. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. 544 pp. Hb.: US$99.00. ISBN: 978‐0‐85745‐908‐4.

Erin B. Taylor

Campbell, Ben. 2013. Living between juniper and palm: nature, culture and power in the Himalayas. New Delhi: Oxford University Press. 392 pp. Hb.: £32.50. ISBN: 978‐0‐19‐807852‐4.

Calum Blaikie

Dafinger, Andreas. 2013. The economics of ethnic conflict. The case of Burkina Faso. Woodbridge: James Currey. 212 pp. Hb.: £45.00. ISBN: 978‐1‐84701‐068‐1.

Jean‐Pierre Jacob

Dimova, Rozita. 2013. Ethno‐Baroque: materiality, aesthetics and conflict in modern‐day Macedonia. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. x + 165 pp., illustrations, index. Hb.: US$67.34. ISBN: 978‐1782380405.

Aleksandar BoŠković

Enloe, Cynthia. 2014. Seriously! Investigating crashes and crises as if women mattered. Berkeley: University of California Press. 264 pp. Pb.: US$24.76. ISBN: 978‐0520275379.

Kristín Loftsdóttir

Ewart, Elizabeth. 2013. Space and society in central Brazil. A Panará ethnography. London: Bloomsbury (London School of Economics Monographs on Social Anthropology, Volume 80). 304 pp. Pb.: US$42.60. ISBN: 978‐0‐85785‐726‐2.

Jan de Wolf

Gammeltoft, M. Tine. 2014. Haunting images: a cultural account of selective reproduction in Vietnam (Philip E. Lilienthal Books). Berkeley: University of California Press. 336 pp. Pb.: US$32.65. ISBN: 978‐0520278431.

Cătălina Tesăr

Girke, Felix (ed.) 2014. Ethiopian images of self and other. Halle (Saale): Universitätsverlag Halle‐Wittenberg. 226 pp. Pb.: €27.80. ISBN: 978‐3‐86977‐105‐2.

Tamás Régi

Hafsteinsson, Sigurjon Baldur. 2013. Unmasking deep democracy. An anthropology of indigenous media in Canada. Aarhus: Intervention Press. 208 pp. Pb.: £25.00. ISBN: 978‐8792724‐08‐3.

Philipp Budka

Hilgers, Mathieu and Eric Mangez. 2015. Bourdieu's theory of social fields. Concepts and applications. London and New York: Routledge. 290 pp. Hb.: US$140.00. ISBN: 978‐1‐13‐877765‐1.

Oscar Desjonqueres

Kirsch, Stuart. 2014. Mining capitalism: the relationship between corporations and their critics. Berkeley: University of California Press. xii + 314 pp. Pb.: US$29.95, £19.95. ISBN: 9780520281714.

Paul Robert Gilbert

Maguire, Mark, Catarine Frois and Nils Zurawski (eds.) 2014. The anthropology of security: perspectives from the frontline of policing, counter‐terrorism and border control. London: Pluto Press. ix + 209 pp. Pb.: £20.50. ISBN: 978‐0‐7453‐3458‐5.

Eyal Ben‐Ari

Pelkmans, Mathijs (ed.) 2013. Ethnographies of doubt. Faith and uncertainty in contemporary societies. London: I.B. Tauris. 256 pp. Hb.: £48.05. ISBN: 9781848858107.

Andreas Bandak

Söderström, Ola, Shalini Randeria, Didier Ruedin, Gianni D'Amato and Francesco Panese (eds.) 2013. Critical mobilities. Oxford and New York: Routledge. 240 pp. Hb.: US$47.08. ISBN: 978‐0415828161.

Raluca Nagy

Talley, Heather Laine. 2014. Saving face. Disfigurement and the politics of appearance. New York: New York University Press. 256 pp. Pb.: US$19.24. ISBN: 978 0 8147 8411 2.

Karen Mogendorff

Van Heekeren, Deborah. 2012. The Shark Warrior of Alewai. A phenomenology of Melanesian identity. Wantage: Sean Kingston Publishing. 224 pp. Hb.: US$110.00. ISBN: 978‐1907774034.

Felix Girke

Weeks, Jeffrey. 2014. Sexualité. Lyon: Presses universitaires. 303 pp. Pb.: €13.00. ISBN: 978‐2‐7297‐0864‐1.

Paola Galbany Estragués

Whitesel, Jason. 2014. Fat gay men: girth, mirth, and the politics of stigma. New York: New York University Press. 192 pp. Pb.: US$19.80. ISBN‐13: 978‐0814724125.

Margaret Campbell

Wilf, Eitan Y. 2014. School for cool: the academic jazz program and the paradox of institutionalized creativity. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 288 pp. Pb.: US$30.00. ISBN: 9780226125190.

Jason Robinson

Wortham, Erica Cusi. 2013. Indigenous media in Mexico. Culture, community and the state. Durham: Duke University Press. 288 pp. Pb.: US$20.00. ISBN: 978‐0822355007.

Alex Vailati

Wright, Christopher. 2013. The echo of things. (Series: Objects/Histories. Critical Perspectives on Art, Material Culture and Representation). Durham: Duke University Press. 221 pp. Pb.: US$23.25. ISBN: 978‐0822355106.

Patricia Prieto‐Blanco

Lovell, Anne M, Stefania Pandolfo, Veena Das, and Sandra Laugier, 2013. Face aux désastres. Une conversation à quatre voix sur la folie, le care et les grandes détresses collectives. Ithaque. 204 pp. Pb.: €23.00. ISBN: 978-2-916120-38-6.

Yannis Gansel