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God, Fatherland, Home: revealing the dark side of our anthropological virtue
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute ( IF 1.2 ) Pub Date : 2020-04-06 , DOI: 10.1111/1467-9655.13251
Mark Goodale 1
Affiliation  

The article uses ethnographic research on right‐wing anti‐government movements in Bolivia conducted at the height of social conflict and cultural violence in 2008 and 2009 to reflect more generally on the relationship between anthropological research, ethical commitment, and the politics of knowledge. The article first describes the relevant epistemological and political contexts in which engaged anthropology emerged as an important disciplinary current. It then goes on to consider how and why the author's research on right‐wing political practice in Bolivia diverged from the disciplinary expectations of engaged anthropology. After reflecting on the implications of this shift, the article concludes by arguing for a methodological recalibration that allows anthropologists to take seriously the ideologies and cultural logics of contemporary right‐wing mobilization, particularly social and political movements that are animated by what Edmund Burke described as ‘just prejudice’.

中文翻译:

上帝,祖国,家:揭示人类学美德的阴暗面

本文使用了在2008年和2009年社会冲突和文化暴力最严重时期进行的玻利维亚右翼反政府运动的人种学研究,以更广泛地反映人类学研究,伦理承诺和知识政治之间的关系。本文首先介绍了相关的认识论和政治背景,在这些背景下,从事人类学成为重要的学科领域。然后继续考虑作者对玻利维亚右翼政治实践的研究如何以及为什么与从事人类学的学科期望背道而驰。在思考了这一转变的含义之后,
更新日期:2020-04-06
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