Moving images - John Layard, fieldwork and photography on Malakula since 1914 - Grand Format

Edition en anglais

Ralph Regenvanu

(Préfacier)

,

Kirk Huffman

(Contributeur)

,

John Layard

(Contributeur)

Note moyenne 
Haidy Geismar et Anita Herle - Moving images - John Layard, fieldwork and photography on Malakula since 1914.
John Layard, fieldwork and photography on Malakula since 1914. From 1914 to 1915 Cambridge anthropologist John Layard worked in Malakula in the New Hebrides... Lire la suite
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Résumé

John Layard, fieldwork and photography on Malakula since 1914. From 1914 to 1915 Cambridge anthropologist John Layard worked in Malakula in the New Hebrides (Vanuatu). This was one of the earliest periods of solitary, intensive fieldwork within the developing discipline of British social anthropology. A student of the famed ethnologist and psychologist William Rivers, Layard was attracted by the region's megalithic culture, known for the large stones and ancestor figures erected during a long ceremonial cycle known as Maki.
Based near the village of Ruruar on the islet of Atchin, Layard voyaged with local friends to their gardens on mainland Malakula and travelled extensively in the region. Layard worked enthusiastically with his local assistants to document and understand the customary lives of the people, taking copious notes and over 450 photographe. His collection of objects and glass plate negatives are housed in the University of Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
This book contains over 300 of these evocative images, most previously unpublished, brought together for the first time with Layard's field notes and captions, and accompanied by critical commentaries from several points of view. The materials gathered here provide an extraordinary record of the elaborate ritual and culture of Small Islanders and reveal photography's rote as an evidential and subjective medium vital to the practice of social anthropology.
The authors develop a nuanced perspective on photography that illuminates the rich potency of the images, the multiple readings they afford as they move through time and space, and the ways these dynamic artefacts actively participate in the process of their own recontextualisation. Unlike those of his contemporaries, Layard's images are participatory and experiential — taken amidst local activities and ritual exchanges.
He established close relations with his assistants, recording the names of many people with whom he lived and worked. The warm feelings Layard expressed towards his Malakulan friends were reciprocated. Commonly called T'soni (Johnny), Layard was also known on Atchin by the Maki title Meldek-were-were, the 'High Lord of Talk'. He is still remembered by some ni-Vanuatu as the first white man who wore the nambas (penis sheath) and participated in kastom dances.
Layard's photographs have played a crucial rote in forming ideas about culture and society, both in Vanuatu and within anthropology. His writings and images have recently been used by ni-Vanuatu as records of traditional lite and to encourage cultural revitalisation. This book follows these moving images from their creation, through their circulation in different media throughout Europe and America, and back to their places of origin.
It explores the resonance of these photographs in the intellectual history of anthropology and illuminates the dynamics of the discipline as a cross-cultural enterprise that connects Western scholarship to indigenous interests within the encounter of fieldwork.

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    01/01/2010
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    978-0-8248-3503-3
  • EAN
    9780824835033
  • Format
    Grand Format
  • Présentation
    Relié
  • Nb. de pages
    308 pages
  • Poids
    1.815 Kg
  • Dimensions
    23,0 cm × 27,0 cm × 3,2 cm

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À propos des auteurs

Haidy Geismar is Assistant Professor in Anthropology and Museum Studies at New York University. Anita Herle is Senior Curator for Anthropology at the University of Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Kirk Huffman (contributor) is a Research Associate of the Australian Museum, Sydney and Honorary Curator of the Vanuatu Cultural Centre, where he was Director from 1977 to 1989.

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