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Customary Strangers: New Perspectives on Peripatetic Peoples in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia
 
 
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Customary Strangers: New Perspectives on Peripatetic Peoples in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia [Hardcover]

Joseph C. Berland (Editor), Aparna Rao (Editor)

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Book Description

0897897714 978-0897897716 March 30, 2004

Social scientists have generally remained impervious to a major economic and cultural adaptation—namely, the peripatetic lifestyle—although this adaptation has been an integral part of developments within the socioeconomic and cultural networks that social scientists study. This lack of interest derives perhaps from the ambiguous integration of peripatetics into these networks as well as the often negatively charged constructs -Gypsies, outsiders, or marginal others—imposed on peripatetics by dominant cultures. As peddlers of the strange to borrow a phrase from Clifford Geertz, peripatetics are situated at the fringes of their host societies and many students of the social ecological and behavioral sciences still continue to overlook the roles of peripatetic peoples.

This collection presents the latest in cross-cultural comparative research on the nature of peripatetic peoples. Contributors examine the place of peripatetic peoples in the everyday lives and diverse cognitive maps of client communities. Relying on Georg Simmel's construct of The Stranger, the contributors to this volume suggest that peripatetic peoples are simultaneously outsiders and insiders, but most important, they are entrepreneurial middlemen traders par excellence. All told, the essays provoke vital reassessments of the anthropological focus on the role and status of cultural brokers and go-betweens in political, economic, and social interactions.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“We recommend this volume highly to all who wish to learn more about the gamut of societies sharing peripatetic adaptations that formerly characterized all Gypsy groups and gave rise to analogous Traveler groups. The ethnographic descriptions of many of the articles are rich and nuanced and will provide much food for thought to all who care to contemplate the larger picture of peripatetic adaptations.”–Romani Studies

Book Description

Essays on peripatetic peoples that stress their roles as cultural brokers, entrepreneurial middlemen, and traders.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
dera members, peripatetic peoples, peripatetic communities, peripatetic strategies, customary strangers, peripatetic minorities, domestic fluidity, disputing activities, peripatetic niche, peddling cloth, service nomads, peripatetic community, roving traders, peripatetic groups, making sieves, other peripatetics, other nomads, itinerant smiths, criminal tribes act, servile groups, many peripatetics, mobile economy, professional strangers, middlemen traders, territorial ownership
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Orang Laut, Aparna Rao, New York, South Asia, Ali Jamil, South Sinai, Georg Simmel, Villasante-de Beauvais, Central Asia, Oxford University Press, West Africa, Dapur Enam, Free Press, Kel Ewey, New Look, Seekoei River, Cambridge University Press, Journal of the Gypsy Lore Society, University of Chicago Press, Villasante Cervello, Abu Sliman, Inku Sunni Muslims, Sheikh Mohammadi, Harvard University Press, Ould Cheikh
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