Milton Public Library

Practicing sectarianism, archival and ethnographic interventions on Lebanon

Label
Practicing sectarianism, archival and ethnographic interventions on Lebanon
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Practicing sectarianism
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Sub title
archival and ethnographic interventions on Lebanon
Summary
Practicing Sectarianism explores the imaginative and contradictory ways that people live sectarianism. The book's essays use the concept as an animating principle within a variety of sites across Lebanon and its diasporas and over a range of historical periods. With contributions from historians and anthropologists, this volume reveals the many ways sectarianism is used to exhibit, imagine, or contest power: What forms of affective pull does it have on people and communities? What epistemological work does it do as a concept? How does it function as a marker of social difference? Examining social interaction, each essay analyzes how people experience sectarianism, sometimes pushing back, sometimes evading it, sometimes deploying it strategically, to a variety of effects and consequences. The collection advances an understanding of sectarianism simultaneously constructed and experienced, a slippery and changeable concept with material effects. And even as the book's focus is Lebanon, its analysis fractures the association of sectarianism with the nation-state and suggests possibilities that can travel to other sites. Practicing Sectarianism, taken as a whole, argues that sectarianism can only be fully understood-and dismantled-if we first take it seriously as a practice
Target audience
adult
Classification
Contributor
Content

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