Island in the Stream

An Ethnographic History of Mayotte

Michael Lambek author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Toronto Press

Published:29th Oct '18

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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Island in the Stream cover

Island in the Stream introduces an original genre of ethnographic history as it follows a community on Mayotte, an East African island in the Mozambique Channel, through eleven periods of fieldwork between 1975 and 2015. Over this 40-year span Mayotte shifted from a declining and neglected colonial backwater to a full d�partement of the French state. In a highly unusual postcolonial trajectory, citizens of Mayotte demanded this incorporation within France rather than joining the independent republic of the Comoros. The Malagasy-speaking Muslim villagers Michael Lambek encountered in 1975 practiced subsistence cultivation and lived without roads, schools, electricity, or running water; today they are educated citizens of the EU who travel regularly to metropolitan France and beyond. Offering a series of ethnographic slices of life across time, Island in the Stream highlights community members' ethical engagement in their own history as they looked to the future, acknowledged the past, and engaged and transformed local forms of sociality, exchange, and ritual performance. This is a unique account of the changing horizons and historical consciousness of an African community and an intimate portrait of the inhabitants and their concerns, as well as a glimpse into the changing perspective of the ethnographer.

  • Winner of 2019 Elliott P. Skinner Book Award awarded by the Association for Africanist Anthropology 2019 (United States)

ISBN: 9781487503918

Dimensions: 235mm x 158mm x 25mm

Weight: 690g

376 pages