ABSTRACT

In this innovative volume, anthropologists turn their attention to a topic that has rarely figured as a focus of concerted investigation and yet which can be described as an intrinsic aspect of all human knowing and part of all processes by which human beings process information about themselves, their identities, their environments and their relations: the imagination. How do anthropologists use imagination in coming to know their research subjects? How might they, and how should they, use their imagination? And how do research subjects themselves understand, describe, justify and limit their use of the imagination? Presenting a range of case studies from a variety of locations including the UK, US, Africa, East Asia and South America, this collection offers a comparative exploration of how imagination has been conceptualized and understood in a range of analytical traditions, with regard to issues of both methodology and ethnomethodology. With emphasis not on abstraction but on imagination as activity, technique and subject situated in the middle of lives, Reflections on Imagination sheds new light on imagination as a universal capacity and practice - something to which human beings attend whenever they make sense of their environments and situate their life-projects in these environments - the means by which worlds come to be.

part I|39 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|20 pages

‘Imagination is in the Barest Reality'

On the Universal Human Imagining of the World

chapter 2|18 pages

From the River

Making Local Histories of the Imagination 1

part II|232 pages

Case Studies

chapter 3|15 pages

Re-Imagining Ethnography 1

chapter 4|16 pages

Tango Heart and Soul

Solace, Suspension, and the Imagination in the Dance Tourist 1

chapter 5|19 pages

Historical Imagination and Imagining Madness

The Experience of Colonial Officers in French West Africa

chapter 6|18 pages

Hauntings

From Anthropology of the Imagination to the Anthropological Imagination

chapter 7|16 pages

Reflections on the Encounters of the Imagination

Ontology, Epistemology and the Limits of the Real in Anthropology

chapter 8|24 pages

Granite and Steel

chapter 10|16 pages

The Social Imaginary and Literature

Understanding the Popularisation of Modern Medicine in Brazil

chapter 11|20 pages

The Imagining Life

Reflections on Imagination in Political Anthropology

chapter 13|26 pages

Infrastructural Imaginaries

Collapsed Futures in Mozambique and Mongolia

chapter 14|11 pages

Imagination/Making

Working with Others and the Formation of Anthropological Knowledge

part III|21 pages

Review

chapter 15|20 pages

Afterword

An End to Imagining?