Full Description
In this erudite and gracefully written ethnography, Mariane Ferme explores the links between a violent historical and political legacy, and the production of secrecy in everyday material culture. The focus is on Mende-speaking southeastern Sierra Leone and the surrounding region. Since 1990, this area has been ravaged by a civil war that produced population displacements and regional instability. The Underneath of Things documents the rural impact of the progressive collapse of the Sierra Leonean state in the past several decades, and seeks to understand how an even earlier history is reinscribed in the present.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Immaterial Practices: Clues in a Modern Sierra Leonean
Landscape
INTERLUDE I: Weaving Cloth, Hair, and the Social World
2. Ambiguity and Gendered Practices
3. Strategies of Incorporation: Marriage and the Forms of
Dependence
INTERLUDE 2: Splitting Kola
4. The House of Impermanence and the Politics of Mobility
5. Becoming a Kpako: The Body and the Aesthetics of Power
INTERLUDE 3: Clay, Palm Oil, and Temporality
6. Children and Their Doubles
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index