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Detalles
| Tipo de material: | Tesis de maestría/doctorado |
|---|---|
| Tipo de documento: | Libro/Texto |
| Todos autores / colaboradores: |
S Ann Dunham; Alice G Dewey; Nancy I Cooper |
| ISBN: | 9780822346876 0822346877 |
| Número OCLC: | 319500658 |
| Notas: | "A John Hope Franklin Center Book." |
| Descripción: | xxiii, 374 p., [36] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), maps ; 25 cm. |
| Contenido: | Introduction -- The socioeconomic organization of metalworking industries -- Kajar, a blacksmithing village in Yogyakarta -- Relevant macrodata -- Government interventions -- Conclusions and development implications. |
| Responsabilidad: | S. Ann Dunham ; edited and with a preface by Alice G. Dewey and Nancy I. Cooper ; with a foreword by Maya Soetoro-Ng and an afterword by Robert W. Hefner. |
Resumen:
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Resumen de la editorial
"The greetings that the village women exchanged with Mom conveyed an intimacy that made clear they had fully taken each other's measure. Their connection had been established to a sufficient degree for laughter to be easy. Mom had come to a real understanding with them, it seemed, and not just the women; she was welcomed and trusted by all. This made me proud, I remember, for many of the same reasons my pride swells at the sight of my brother, our president; Mom too moved with such ease through every world, and people opened up at the sight of her smile."oMaya Soetoro-Ng, daughter of S. Ann Dunham and sister of President Barack Obama, from the foreword "S. Ann Dunham's Surviving against the Odds bears witness to her knowledge of and affection for the Southeast Asian nation of Indonesia. The book also speaks legions about Dunham's integrity as a cultural anthropologist... By the mid-1980s Dunham had begun to see the audience for her work as made up of not just academics but Indonesians, aid workers, and foreign analysts whose findings affect the lives of ordinary Indonesians. Rather than go with the academic flow, Dunham stayed true to a research program requiring varied and rigorous methodologies, all in an effort to speak truth to power and policy making."oRobert W. Hefner, Boston University, president of the Association for Asian Studies, from the afterword "Surviving against the Odds is a work of very fine scholarship grounded in a deep understanding of Indonesia. Reading it, I learned a great deal about economic anthropology, blacksmithing (across a range of dimensions, from the supernatural to metallurgy), local life and labor in the Javanese village of Kajar, and the remarkable welter of development schemes and projects in play during the long period of S. Ann Dunham's research. Dunham knew the arcane world of development very well and her account of it is fascinating and important."oDonald Brenneis, University of California, Santa Cruz, past president of the American Anthropological Association "A few years before her death, Barack Obama's mother completed her doctoral dissertation. Nearly two decades later, S. Ann Dunham's fieldwork has been published o a fulfillment of her dream, courtesy of her daughter...Over a period of 14 years, Dunham visited and lived among Indonesian villagers. Her work challenged the prevailing view among social anthropologists of the time that Indonesian peasants were better off just cultivating rice...The result is Surviving the Odds, a study of blacksmithing in the village of Kajar, Indonesia." - NPR "Surviving against the Odds" is a condensed version of Ann's PhD on village industries in Java that she says she worked for almost two decades. In the end Ann decided to focus on just one of five crafts - bamboo, clay, leather, textile and blacksmithing - she had initially intended to cover in five villages she found specializing in these crafts. But even with blacksmithing as her "smaller topic", Ann ended up with a dissertation more than 1,000 pages long, finally submitted in 1992... Ann's book - like her - is deeply empathetic. Full of evocative descriptions of the lives of villagers she worked with, it is a testament to her commitment to the development of lives of rural and marginalized peoples all around the world." - Julia Suryakusuma, The Jakarta Post Leer más
Reseñas de usuarios de WorldCat (1)
A wonderful person we never got to know
Reading this work by Ann Dunham and learning of her efforts and success at the microcredit system now the standard in Indonesia was really a great experience.
I just feel sad that she is not here now to tell us much more about her son's life with her and what her impressions would be...
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Reading this work by Ann Dunham and learning of her efforts and success at the microcredit system now the standard in Indonesia was really a great experience.
I just feel sad that she is not here now to tell us much more about her son's life with her and what her impressions would be of her son as the President of the United States of America.
It does interest me, though, why her son has not made the microcredit issue at the forefront of his foreign policies as a way to advance his mother's wonderful legacy.
I also wish she had come to have a better view of Christianity and passed that on to her son. I hope in her last weeks and days dying from cancer that she found peace with God and passed on into Heaven.
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Etiquetas
Materiales similares
Temas relacionados:(14)
- Rural industries -- Indonesia.
- Blacksmithing -- Indonesia.
- Metal-work -- Indonesia.
- Indonesia -- Rural conditions.
- Dorf
- Metallverarbeitung
- Ländlicher Raum
- Kleinindustrie
- Java
- Indonesien
- Metaalbewerking.
- Economische antropologie.
- Plattelandseconomie
- Java.
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