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Contradiction and Forgetting in Yewéssey Culture

dc.contributor.author Matory, J Lorand
dc.date.accessioned 2013-04-15T16:40:53Z
dc.date.issued 2001-07
dc.identifier.issn 1548-7466
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10161/6502
dc.description.abstract Anthropologists are now inescapably aware of conflict, contradiction, and negotiation in even the most seemingly "traditional" socio-cultural orders. The literature on "memory" is particularly rich in illustrations of how contradictory evocations of the past undergird conflicting performances and assertions of interest in the present. This study of the traditionally nomadic Yewéssey people documents a genre of performance seldom discussed in the anthropological literature—the ritual performance of forgetting as a means of resolving intractable conflicts and cultural contradictions. This essay is written with an undergraduate or lay audience in mind and is intended to introduce anthropological comparative method, and some of its most important vocabulary, in accessible language. Questions for classroom discussion are provided at the end.
dc.publisher Wiley
dc.relation.ispartof Transforming Anthropology
dc.relation.isversionof 10.1525/tran.2001.10.2.2
dc.subject Yewessey tribe
dc.subject memory
dc.subject moieties
dc.subject sacrifice
dc.title Contradiction and Forgetting in Yewéssey Culture
dc.type Journal article
duke.contributor.id Matory, J Lorand|0495615
pubs.begin-page 2
pubs.end-page 12
pubs.issue 2
pubs.organisational-group African and African American Studies
pubs.organisational-group Cultural Anthropology
pubs.organisational-group Duke
pubs.organisational-group Trinity College of Arts & Sciences
pubs.volume 10


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