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Places, Practices, and Things: The Articulation of Arrernte Kinship with Welfare and Work

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Places, Practices, and Things: The Articulation of Arrernte Kinship with Welfare and Work
Author(s)Austin-Broos, Diane
AbstractIn this article, I discuss problems of articulation that occur between kin-based and market-based societies. In particular, I address Western Arrernte (Aranda) people in central Australia and their struggles to articulate bilateral kinship networks with a welfare economy and state. I also consider the transitions involved as Arrernte people come to objectify kin relations more in terms of commodities and cash and less in detailed knowledge and experience of country. My discussion aims to underline the tensions and struggles in an Arrernte circumstance sometimes overlooked in recent anthropology, which has focused either on ritual descent groups or on issues of welfare and economics without relating them to kinship. I identify differing contexts of ethnography, along with their import both for analysis and a politics of difference.
IssueNo1
Pages118-135
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo30
PubDateFebruary 2003
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496

Subsistence and Economic Practices, Organization, and Structure

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