Book reviews
 
Displaced Things   

Displaced Things


Sandra H. Dudley

Paperback. Routledge 2014-05-15.
ISBN 9780415840477
Buy from Amazon.co.uk







Publisher description

Displaced Things explores the movements of material things from the starting point and perspective of the object. It does so through the lens of displacement, drawing on earlier work on forced migration and conceptualising displacement in relation to anthropological ritual theory. It aims not only to augment understandings of the significance of things and the complexities of their relationships with human beings, but also to problematize notions of the settings through which objects move - including those of museum and 'heritage', definable as they are by their particular approaches to the re-contextualisations of things. Furthermore, the book contends that displaced things are no more 'lost' or rendered somehow inauthentic or useless, than are displaced people; rather, the series of shifts by which contexts, meanings, values and even material attributes may alter over time are part of a continual process of change - sometimes gradual, sometimes abrupt - and each moment and state along the way has its own validity and opportunity. In this perspective, the book suggests, an object-centred view has profound implications for envisioning the possibilities of things.



The book develops its arguments through discussion of an array of displaced objects, including the forcibly migrated, the collected, the institutionalised, and the bereaved. It draws particularly but not solely on examples from the author's anthropological field research in Thailand and Burma (Myanmar) and brings in too cases from elsewhere, considering artefacts that have been dislocated or exiled from their original or principal geographical, historical, cultural, intellectual and personal contexts. The book is structured by the stages of the ritual process used to theorise displacement, passing in three parts from the crossing of the boundary, through liminality, to incorporation. The first part examines some of the ways in which things translocate from one setting to another, the importance of thresholds and what it means to become displaced. It opens up a view in which narratives of the materiality of human forced migration and of object acquisition and movement illuminate both each other and the spatiotemporal phenomenon of displacement itself. The book then moves on in its second part to explore issues of representation, metaphor and the re-ordering of categories, structures and values in the place of exile - be it a refugee camp, museum or elsewhere. It looks in detail too at continued relationships, real and imagined - and the many forms they take - with the pre-displacement past, embodied by and enacted through objects. And finally the volume explores the ways in which the objects are experienced in their present, displaced settings, and the implications and potentialities they carry



More books by Sandra H. Dudley

Similar books

Rate the book

Write a review and share your opinion with others. Try to focus on the content of the book. Read our instructions for further information.

Displaced Things



Your rating:  1 2 3 4 5

Please enter a title for your review (min 2 words):



Type your review in the space below (max 1000 words):



Language of the review: 

Your name (optional):



Your email address (not displayed, only for verification):







Displaced Things Your review will be displayed within five to seven business days.

Displaced Things Reviews that doesn't follow our instructions will not be displayed.







Book reviews » Displaced Things
Displaced Things
Displaced Things
  
Categories

Address Books & Journals

Art & Architecture

Biography

Business, Finance & Law

Comics & Graphic Novels

Computers & Internet

Crime, Thrillers & Mystery

Fiction

Food & Drink

Health & Family

History

Home & Garden

Horror

Mind, Body & Spirit

Music, Stage & Screen

Poetry, Drama & Criticism

Reference & Languages

Religion & Spirituality

Science & Nature

Science Fiction & Fantasy

Scientific & Medical

Society & Philosophy

Sports & Hobbies





Book reviews | Help & support | About us


Bokrecensioner Boganmeldelser Bokanmeldelser Kirja-arvostelut Critiques de Livres Buchrezensionen Critica Literaria Book reviews Book reviews Recensioni di Libri Boekrecensies Critica de Libros
Book reviews