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Toward a Comparative Anthropology of Activism. Activist Identity Formations in Germany and Uganda

Dialectical Anthropology (Cover)

Dialectical Anthropology (Cover)

Podgornik-Jakil, Žiga; Bens, Jonas – 2021

There is an ongoing debate in anthropology on the kinds of subject positions activists ascribe to the marginalized actors they encounter and the political consequences this brings about. Drawing from ethnographic research on refugee activism in Germany and transitional justice activism in Uganda, we revisit the respective debates on humanitarian activism, human rights activism, and political activism and argue to reframe the analysis. Instead of looking for the “right” subject position activists should ascribe to the people they engage with, the anthropology of activism should embrace a research approach that looks at the material conditions, in which activists and their subjects find themselves in and the kind of agency they are able to develop within these conditions.

Titel
Toward a Comparative Anthropology of Activism
Verfasser
Podgornik-Jakil, Žiga; Bens, Jonas
Datum
2021
Kennung
DOI: 10.1007/s10624-021-09628-3
Erschienen in
Dialectical Anthropology 45(3)
Sprache
eng
Art
Text
Größe oder Länge
pp. 297–314