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Cultural wounding, healing, and emerging ethnicities / Amanda Kearney.

By: Kearney, Amanda [author.].
Publisher: New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014Description: 241 pages.ISBN: 9781137480569 (hardback).Subject(s): Ethnicity | Group identity | Ethnic conflict | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / GeneralDDC classification: 305.8 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction -- 1. Ethnicity, (not Race) and Belonging -- 2. Cultural Wounding -- 3. Wounds: Broken Bodies and the Rupture of Kinship -- 4. What Happens When the Wounded Survive? Ethnicity and the Healing Project -- 5. Cultural Wounding, Healing and Emerging Ethnicities -- for Indigenous Australians -- 6. Life in the Affirmative - Cultural Wounding, Healing and African Descent in Brazil -- Conclusion.
Summary: "Cultural Wounding, Healing, and Emerging Ethnicities presents an analysis of ethnic identities that have emerged from contexts of political conflict and social suffering. Today, there is new appeal in the analysis of ethnicity, not merely as innate and fixed identities or fragmented and lost identities, but rather as wounded and then creatively reclaimed. If ethnic identity is more than a primordial sense of self, then what does it mean for ethnic groups who have survived wounding? What happens when we leave "tradition" behind? Kearney discusses international examples of cultural wounding and healing and presents two close readings of emerging ethnicities in Australia and Brazil"--Summary: "This book examines ethnic identities as they emerge out from experiences of cultural wounding. Framed as a study of healing and recuperation, it offers a new way of examining the impact of ethnic conflict and better appreciating the identities that emerge"--
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Books Books NASSDOC Library
305.8 KEA-C (Browse shelf) Available 53020

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Machine generated contents note: -- Introduction -- 1. Ethnicity, (not Race) and Belonging -- 2. Cultural Wounding -- 3. Wounds: Broken Bodies and the Rupture of Kinship -- 4. What Happens When the Wounded Survive? Ethnicity and the Healing Project -- 5. Cultural Wounding, Healing and Emerging Ethnicities -- for Indigenous Australians -- 6. Life in the Affirmative - Cultural Wounding, Healing and African Descent in Brazil -- Conclusion.

"Cultural Wounding, Healing, and Emerging Ethnicities presents an analysis of ethnic identities that have emerged from contexts of political conflict and social suffering. Today, there is new appeal in the analysis of ethnicity, not merely as innate and fixed identities or fragmented and lost identities, but rather as wounded and then creatively reclaimed. If ethnic identity is more than a primordial sense of self, then what does it mean for ethnic groups who have survived wounding? What happens when we leave "tradition" behind? Kearney discusses international examples of cultural wounding and healing and presents two close readings of emerging ethnicities in Australia and Brazil"--

"This book examines ethnic identities as they emerge out from experiences of cultural wounding. Framed as a study of healing and recuperation, it offers a new way of examining the impact of ethnic conflict and better appreciating the identities that emerge"--

English.

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