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Thinking with Ngangas Stephan Palmie

Thinking with Ngangas By Stephan Palmie

Thinking with Ngangas by Stephan Palmie


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Thinking with Ngangas Summary

Thinking with Ngangas: What Afro-Cuban Ritual Can Tell Us about Scientific Practice and Vice Versa by Stephan Palmie

A comparative investigation of Afro-Cuban ritual and Western science that aims to challenge the rationality of Western expert practices.

Inspired by the exercises of Father Lafitau, an eighteenth-century Jesuit priest and protoethnographer who compared the lives of the Iroquois to those of the ancient Greeks, Stephan Palmie embarks on a series of unusual comparative investigations of Afro-Cuban ritual and Western science. What do organ transplants have to do with ngangas, a complex assemblage of mineral, animal, and vegetal materials, including human remains, that serve as the embodiment of the spirits of the dead? How do genomics and ancestry projects converge with divination and oracular systems? What does it mean that Black Cubans in the United States took advantage of Edisonian technology to project the disembodied voice of a mystical entity named ecue onto the streets of Philadelphia? Can we consider Afro-Cuban spirit possession as a form of historical knowledge production?

By writing about Afro-Cuban ritual in relation to Western scientific practice, and vice versa, Palmie hopes to challenge the rationality of Western expert practices, revealing the logic that brings together enchantment and experiment.

Thinking with Ngangas Reviews

Thinking with Ngangas is a major intellectual contribution delivered with flair, humor, and unfailing erudition. Via his 'method of reciprocal illumination,' Palmie offers a series of lively and richly perturbing essays offering insights into problems as diverse as the rationality debate, transplant surgery, anthropology's ontological turn, genomic identity realization, acoustic technology, and the future of anthropology itself. * Janice Boddy, University of Toronto *
In this highly original and thought-provoking encounter between anthropology and philosophy, Palmie thinks with some of his most dramatic 'finds' from decades contemplating the ethnographic interface with Afro-Cuban religion. Playful and utterly earnest, this book will have you savoring historical ironies and rethinking anthropology's foundational questions about cultural difference. * Kristina Wirtz, Western Michigan University *

About Stephan Palmie

Stephan Palmie is the Norman and Edna Freehling Professor of Anthropology at the University of Chicago and the author of Wizards and Scientists: Explorations in Afro-Cuban Modernity and Tradition and The Cooking of History: How Not to Study Afro-Cuban Religion, the latter also published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1 EP and the Problem of Other Worlds
Chapter 2 Thinking with Ngangas about Transplant Surgery, Personhood, and the Limits of Objectively Necessary Appearances
Chapter 3 Thinking with Ifa about Genomic Ancestry Profiles and Racecraft
Chapter 4 Thinking with Abakua about Early Analog Acoustic Technology and the Dialectics of Ensoniment
Chapter 5 Thinking with the Cajon pa' los Muertos about Historicist Knowledge and Its Conditions of Impossibility
Chapter 6 Thinking with Otanes about Mid-Twentieth-Century American Anthropology
Epilogue Thinking with Tomas about My Own Work
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

Additional information

NGR9780226825946
9780226825946
0226825949
Thinking with Ngangas: What Afro-Cuban Ritual Can Tell Us about Scientific Practice and Vice Versa by Stephan Palmie
New
Paperback
The University of Chicago Press
2023-10-10
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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