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University of California Press

About the Book

Out of War draws on Mariane C. Ferme’s three decades of ethnographic engagements to examine the physical and psychological aftereffects of the harms of Sierra Leone's civil war. Ferme analyzes the relationship between violence, trauma, and the political imagination, focusing on “war times”—the different qualities of temporality arising from war. She considers the persistence of precolonial and colonial figures of sovereignty re-elaborated in the context of war, and the circulation of rumors and neologisms that freeze in time collective anxieties linked to particular phases of the conflict (or “chronotopes”). Beyond the expected traumas of war, Ferme explores the breaks in the intergenerational transmission of farming and hunting techniques, and the lethal effects of remembering experienced traumas and forgetting local knowledge. In the context of massive population displacements and humanitarian interventions, this ethnography traces strategies of survival and material dwelling, and the juridical creation of new figures of victimhood, where colonial and postcolonial legacies are reinscribed in neoliberal projects of decentralization and individuation.

About the Author

Mariane C. Ferme is Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of The Underneath of Things: Violence, History, and the Everyday in Sierra Leone

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
War Times and Forms of Life
1 Belatedness 39
Vision, Writing, and the Labor of Time
Chronotope 1: Prefiguring Shifting Alliances—The Sobel 69
2 Wartime Rumors 74
Red Cross as Rebel Cross and Other Figures of the Collective Imagination
Chronotope 2: Numbers, Examples, and Exceptions 98
3 Hunters, Warriors, and Their Technologies 110
4 Sitting on the Land 147
The Political and Symbolic Economy of the Chieftaincy
5 Refugees and Diasporic Publics 171
The Territorial State Reconfigured
6 Child Soldiers and the Contested Imaginary of Community after War 198
7 Forced Marriage and Sexual Enslavement 218
Debating Consent, Custom, and the Law at the Special Court for Sierra Leone
8 Inscriptions on the Wall 237
Chinese Material Traces in the Landscape
Conclusion 256
Surviving and Moving On—Ephemeral Returns
Notes 267
References 283

Reviews

"Ferme weaves together a careful analysis of archival writings and photos with participant observation, personal meditations, and reinterpretations of war tropes to illustrate how violence flares up in popular anxieties and then dies down, or how it continues to live on in traumas, deaths, and breakages in the social world."
African Studies Review
“There is no realm of life that Mariane Ferme overlooks in Sierra Leone as she calls pundits, analysts, and international officials to account for their disastrous misreadings of the war and postwar situation. Her exemplary book transcends ready distinctions between academic and policy-orientated work in the best possible way.”—Joseph Hellweg, Associate Professor of Religion, Florida State University

“This is a rich ethnography based on a great deal of close personal experience in the field. A nuanced account of the civil war in Sierra Leone and its aftermath, the book elicits new and innovative insights into such phenomena as child soldiers, forced marriage, chiefships, and youth militias.”—James H. Smith, Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Davis

Awards

  • Elliott P. Skinner Award Finalist 2019 2019, Association for Africanist Anthropology