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University of California Press

About the Book

Anthropologists have long looked to forager-cultivator cultures for insights into human lifeways. But they have often not been attentive enough to locals’ horizons of concern and to the enormous disparity in population size between these groups and other societies. Us, Relatives explores how scalar blindness skews our understanding of these cultures and the debates they inspire. Drawing on her long-term research with a community of South Asian foragers, Nurit Bird-David provides a scale-sensitive ethnography of these people as she encountered them in the late 1970s and reflects on the intellectual journey that led her to new understandings of their lifeways and horizons. She elaborates on indigenous modes of “being many” that have been eclipsed by scale-blind anthropology, which generally uses its large-scale conceptual language of persons, relations, and ethnic groups for even tiny communities. Through the idea of pluripresence, Bird-David reveals a mode of plural life that encompasses a diversity of humans and nonhumans through notions of kinship and shared life. She argues that this mode of belonging subverts the modern ontological touchstone of “imagined communities,” rooted not in sameness among dispersed strangers but in intimacy among relatives of infinite diversity.

About the Author

Nurit Bird-David is Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of Haifa and the author of numerous articles on hunter-gatherer lifeways.

Table of Contents

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PROLOGUE: ONE OF US
INTRODUCTION: SCALAR BLINDNESS AND FORAGER WORLDS
DOWNSCALE 1. MAPS OF HOME
1. AT HOME: SETTING AND MIND SETTING
DOWNSCALE 2. CENSUS OF RELATIVES
2. LIVING PLURALLY: MOBILITY AND VISITING
DOWNSCALE 3. TREE OF RELATIVES
3. THE SIB MATRIX: DYADIC AND SEQUENTIAL LOGIC
4. COUPLES AND CHILDREN: GENDER, CAREGIVING, AND FORAGING TOGETHER
DOWNSCALE 4. TAXONOMY OF NONHUMAN RELATIVES
5. NONHUMAN KIN: UNISPECIES SOCIETIES AND PLURAL COMMUNITIES
DOWNSCALE 5. FAMILY AND ETHNONYM
6. A CONTINUUM OF RELATIVES: OTHERING AND US-ING
7. THE STATE’S FORAGERS: THE SCALE OF MULTICULTURALISM
EPILOGUE: PLURIPRESENT AND IMAGINED COMMUNITIES

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
NOTES
REFERENCES
INDEX