ABSTRACT

This book explores the role and implications of responsibility for anthropology, asking how responsibility is recognised and invoked in the world, what relations it draws upon, and how it comes to define notions of the person, institutional practices, ways of knowing and modes of evaluation. The category of responsibility has a long genealogy within the discipline of anthropology and it surfaces in contemporary debates as well as in anthropologists’ collaboration with other disciplines, including when anthropology is applied in fields such as development, medicine, and humanitarian response. As a category that unsettles, challenges and critically engages with political, ethical and epistemological questions, responsibility is central to anthropological theory, ethnographic practice, collaborative research, and applied engagement. With chapters focused on a variety of cultural contexts, this volume considers how anthropology can contribute to a better understanding of responsibility, including the ‘responsibility of anthropology’ and the responsibility of anthropologists to specific others.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Anthropology and Responsibility

chapter 1|24 pages

Edgy imaginaries

“Ghost” orangutans, extinction, and responsibility in a plantation landscape

chapter 2|20 pages

The responsibility to consume

Excessive “environmentourism” against rhinoceros extinction in South Africa

chapter 3|16 pages

Responsibility versus responsibilization

Mafiacraft, witchcraft and the rise of conspiracy thinking today1

chapter 4|17 pages

In the wake of disenchantment

Silence and the limits of ethnographic attentiveness

chapter 5|20 pages

The Vulnerability Vortex

Health, exclusion, and social responsibility

chapter 6|18 pages

Keeping things under control

Responsibilities toward things, homes, and people in hoarding disorder

chapter 7|19 pages

Racialized positionalities

Ethnographic responsibility and the anthropology of racism and white supremacy

chapter 8|19 pages

Of Calcutta, death, and the South

Juxtaposing three Calcuttas/Kolkatas

chapter 9|19 pages

The countess' diaries and taonga Māori

Twenty-first century collaborations around nineteenth century collecting