Fracturing Resemblances: Identity and Mimetic Conflict in Melanesia and the West (Easa Monographs) (Paperback)
$21.81 - Save $0.69 (3%) - RRP $22.50 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Fracturing Resemblances Western societies draw on concepts of the "individual" in constructing their images of the ethnic group and define these in terms of difference. This study explores the implications of these constructs for Western understanding of social order and ethnic conflicts, and compares them with the forms of cultural identity characteristic of Melanesia.
Full description- Publisher: Berghahn Books
- Published: 12 December 2006
- Format: Paperback 192 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Violence In Society | Ethnic Studies | Social & Cultural Anthropology | Physical Anthropology & Ethnography
- ISBN 13: 9781845450977 ISBN 10: 1845450973
- Sales rank: 428,750
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Full description for Fracturing Resemblances
This book offers a counterintuitive and innovative approach to the politics of cultural difference and social order. The appeal of Harrison's argument is enhanced because he shows that currently dominant approaches to the politics of identity and difference are likely to be misguided, but does not resort to a wrongheaded appeal to universalism that simply collapses difference." * ANTHROPOLOGICAL FORUM "I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It is clearly and convincingly written, covers a large number of fascinating and diverse ethnographic cases, and its central theoretical propositions are well worthy of consideration and debate." * American Anthropologist Western societies draw crucially on concepts of the 'individual' in constructing their images of the ethnic group and nation and define these in terms of difference. This study explores the implications of these constructs for Western understanding of social order and ethnic conflicts. Comparing them with the forms of cultural identity characteristic of Melanesia as they have developed since pre-colonial times, the author arrives at a surprising conclusion: he argues that these kinds of identities are more properly and adequately viewed as forms of disguised or denied resemblance, and that it is these covert commonalities that give rise to, and prolong, social divisions and conflicts between groups. Simon Harrison is Reader in Social Anthropology at the University of Ulster, and has carried out ethnographic fieldwork among the people of Avatip in Papua New Guinea. He has published extensively on Melanesian warfare, ethnopsychology, cultural identity, and indigenous forms of intellectual property.

