ABSTRACT

This collection of extended papers examines the ways in which relations between national, ethnic, religious and gender groups are underpinned by each group's perceptions of their distinctive identities and of the nature of the boundaries which divide them. Questions of frontier and identity are theorised with reference to the Maori, Australian aborigines and Celtic groups.
The theoretical arguments and ethnographic perspectives of this book place it at the cutting edge of contemporary anthropological scholarship on identity, with respect to the study of ethnicity, nationalism, localism, gender and indigenous peoples. It will be of value to scholars and students of social and cultural anthropology, human geography and social psychology.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Discriminating relations: identity, boundary and authenticity

part I|60 pages

Boundary

chapter Chapter 1|20 pages

Boundaries and connections

chapter Chapter 2|22 pages

Maori and modernity

Ruatara's dying 1

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

Violence and the work of time

part II|95 pages

Identity

chapter Chapter 5|28 pages

Peripheral wisdom 1

chapter Chapter 6|25 pages

Peripheral vision

Nationalism, national identity and the objective correlative in Scotland 1