Initiating Change in Highland Ethiopia
Causes and Consequences of Cultural Transformation
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:19th Jul '07
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This 2002 book presents fascinating insights into cultural change and transformation in the little-known Gamo Highlands of Southern Ethiopia.
Fascinating insight into cultural change and transformation in a rural community in Southern Ethiopia. Two types of ritual are performed by the same people: one has remained stable, while the other has been transformed. In this 2002 book, Dena Freeman focuses on ethnographical and historical data to analyse how this can occur.In a rural community in Southern Ethiopia, there are two types of rituals performed by the same people. Historical evidence suggests that one has shown remarkable stability over the years, while the other has undergone massive transformations. External factors are the same, so how is this to be explained? In this 2002 book, Dena Freeman focuses on ethnographical and historical data from the Gamo Highlands of Southern Ethiopia to tackle the question of cultural change and transformation. She uses a comparative perspective and contrasts the continuity in sacrificial rituals with the rapid divergence and differentiation in initiations. Freeman argues that although external change drives internal cultural transformation, the way in which it does is greatly influenced by the structural organization of the cultural systems themselves. This insight leads to a rethinking of the analytic tension between structure and agency that is at the heart of contemporary anthropological theory.
"This is an elegant account of an extended rural community in southern Ethiopia." African Studies Review
ISBN: 9780521037761
Dimensions: 227mm x 148mm x 11mm
Weight: 296g
192 pages