Collecting a decade of work from iconic anthropologist and writer
Michael Taussig, The Corn Wolf pinpoints a moment of intellectual
development for the master stylist, exemplifying the “nervous
system” approach to writing and truth that has characterized his
trajectory. Pressured by the permanent state of emergency that imbues
our times, this approach marries storytelling with theory, thickening
spiraling analysis with ethnography and putting the study of so-called
primitive societies back on the anthropological agenda as a way of
better understanding the sacred in everyday life. The leading figure
of these projects is the corn wolf, whom Wittgenstein used in his
fierce polemic on Frazer’s Golden Bough. For just as the corn wolf
slips through the magic of language in fields of danger and disaster,
so we are emboldened to take on the widespread culture of
academic—or what he deems “agribusiness”—writing, which strips
ethnography from its capacity to surprise and connect with other
worlds, whether peasant farmers in Colombia, Palestinians in Israel,
protestors in Zuccotti Park, or eccentric yet fundamental aspects of
our condition such as animism, humming, or the acceleration of time.
A glance at the chapter titles—such as “The Stories Things
Tell” or “Iconoclasm Dictionary”—along with his zany drawings,
testifies to the resonant sensibility of these works, which lope like
the corn wolf through the boundaries of writing and understanding.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226310992
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter