1994
DOI: 10.1080/02757206.1994.9960856
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Introduction: Five theses on ethnography as colonial practice1

Abstract: Despite the influence of Thomas Kuhn on critical assessments of anthropology, disciplinary histories written by anthropologists still tend to be self-serving. To this day, it seems evident to look upon the great thinkers of anthropology, those whom we think revolutionized its theories and methods, as the main carriers of the history of anthropology. Our own research projects, concerning localized, contextual histories of ethnographic practices in colonial Tanganyika (Pels) and Vietnam (Salemink), made us consi… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…If the ethnographic authority of ‘being there’ was thus shown to be essentially incomplete, it was not out of a pure interest in intertextuality or dialogue 9 but to reconstruct the material mediations of such constructions of the field – that is, whether the mode of the ethnographers' being there evoked memories and practices of trade, military violence, revenue extraction, or missionary presence (see Pels and Salemink 1994a: 16; 1999). ‘Memories of trade’ could, indeed, persuade an ethnographer that it was not her ‘being there’ but the nineteenth‐century arrival of a naturalist (in this case, Alfred Russel Wallace) that turned out to be the more significant moment to understand the field in which she was engaged (Spyer 2000), and other monographs have circumscribed their field in terms of the previous arrival of a missionary (Pels 1999a; Steedly 1993).…”
Section: Methods and Epistemologies: The Strategic Illusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…If the ethnographic authority of ‘being there’ was thus shown to be essentially incomplete, it was not out of a pure interest in intertextuality or dialogue 9 but to reconstruct the material mediations of such constructions of the field – that is, whether the mode of the ethnographers' being there evoked memories and practices of trade, military violence, revenue extraction, or missionary presence (see Pels and Salemink 1994a: 16; 1999). ‘Memories of trade’ could, indeed, persuade an ethnographer that it was not her ‘being there’ but the nineteenth‐century arrival of a naturalist (in this case, Alfred Russel Wallace) that turned out to be the more significant moment to understand the field in which she was engaged (Spyer 2000), and other monographs have circumscribed their field in terms of the previous arrival of a missionary (Pels 1999a; Steedly 1993).…”
Section: Methods and Epistemologies: The Strategic Illusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If, therefore, the dichotomous representations of colonisers versus colonised were the dominant discourse in which the ideals of colonial society were formulated, the anthropology of colonialism took the conditions of possibility of such oppositions, and the modes of production of knowledge that characterised the historical relationships from which they emerged, as its object. This distinguishes the anthropology of colonialism from the classical history of anthropology, since the former starts from the assumption that ‘it is better to regard academic anthropology as a specific instance of ethnographic practice rather than the other way around’ (Pels and Salemink 1994a: 5). Instead of taking academic anthropology as a phenomenon sui generis , the anthropology of colonialism studied the ethnographic practices that provided the conditions of possibility for its classifications of colonisers and colonised.…”
Section: Objects and Ontologies: The Past Catching Up With The Presentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…98 But as Pels and Salemink state, "even those missionaries who had little or no tolerance toward 'other' customs had to communicate the Gospel, and to learn another language to do so." 99 With regard to Muslim missions, Ho argues that-at least for the Hadrami diaspora in the Indian Ocean from the sixteenth century onward-there existed no such link with trade and conquest, and contacts were on the basis of exchange. The practice of building schools and mosques and learning the local language, however, is no different.…”
Section: Historiography and Qualitative Examplesmentioning
confidence: 99%