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Michele Dominy - Calling the Station Home - 9780742509528 - V9780742509528
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Calling the Station Home

€ 75.00
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Description for Calling the Station Home Paperback. This text examines the social, spatial and property practices of New Zealand's high country. It combines historical, literary and ethnographic approaches to draw a portrait of families whose many features can be used in the debates about land use in the colonies of the British diaspora. Num Pages: 328 pages, bibliography, index. BIC Classification: 1MBN; HBJM; JFSL9; JHMC; RNT. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 227 x 160 x 16. Weight in Grams: 450.
A challenging addition to the contentious discourse on cultural identity, indigeneity and land ownership,Calling the Station Home examines the social, spatial, and property practices of New Zealand's high country. This engaging study combines historical, literary, and ethnographic approaches to draw a fine-grained portrait of tussock-grassland and mountain land families whose material culture, social arrangements, geographic knowledge, and sociolinguistic features speak directly to debates about land use and sustainability in the white settlement colonies of the British diaspora. In the midst of national and international disputes on authenticity, legitimacy, land rights, and resource management,Calling the Station Home provides a methodology for articulating the specificity of attachment to place. It examines the relation of habitation and identity within the context of competing claims by environment and recreation lobbies, government and conservation agencies, overseas developers, and the indigenous South Island Ngai Tahu. Calling the Station Home is especially timely in its refocusing of attention to settler-descendant expressions of belonging and indigeneity at a moment when precolonial populations are asserting land restitution claims. In doing so, the volume contributes to postcolonial cultural analysis in ways that reverse traditional scholarship, turning the lens on the colonizers rather than the colonized, opening new ways of understanding place, culture and home.

Product Details

Format
Paperback
Publication date
2000
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield United States
Number of pages
328
Condition
New
Number of Pages
328
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD, United States
ISBN
9780742509528
SKU
V9780742509528
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15

About Michele Dominy
Michèle Dominy is Professor of Anthropology at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.

Reviews for Calling the Station Home
Dominy uses classical and contemporary ethnographic skills to maximum effect. Calling the Station Home is soundly researched and attractively presented. Michéle Dominy has done an excellent job and provides an interpretation which is critically informed, sensitive and perceptive. Destined to achieve classic status.
Journal of Historical Geography
In this book I discovered the virtue of anthropology as an academic discipline, searching for realities among appearances, sifting what people say and do for cultural patterns and thereby enabling others to catch a glimpse of the depth and complexity of relationships among high-country people and between these people and landscape.
Robyn McPhail, Editor
Rural Network News
Calling the Station Home is an important contribution to debates about identity and indigeneity in the Pacific, today and in the past. It will resonate in discussions far beyond the high country, and contribute to new understandings of very difficult issues.
R. Gerard Ward
Journal of Pacific History
This is an important and thoughtful book which must be read by anyone interested in rural New Zealand, the pursuit of sustainable forms of land use, an our ongoing search for a more distinctive national identity.
Tom Brooking
New Zealand Journal Of History
Dominy's sympathetic intelligence and astute ethnographic skills have yielded a fascinating and important work, rich in detail, perceptive in judgment and well worth the attention of those interested in the social construction of space, the spatiality of society, and such issues as cultural legitimacy, indigenous land claims, environmental management and the "complex, dynamic and diachronic interplay of cultural and environmental systems".
Pacific Affairs
A ground-breaking and scholarly ethnographic study of Pakeha New Zealanders.
Oceana
Dominy provides a sensitive account of gender as it relates to everyday work, the homestead and surrounds, and, especially, generational succession.
American Ethnologist
Dominy's research provides a very detailed and absorbing account of the processes by which the high country settler descendants establish a self-defining indigeneity...I hope that the book attracts the attention it deserves so that the relationship of Pakeha to the land become a more widely accepted subject for research and political debate.
Oceana
Dominy's book provides a stimulating addition to the growing body of work examining the contours of post-colonial European identities in Aotearoa/New Zealand, not in a spirit of denouncement, but rather in hope of a reflective understanding that starts to explore the myriad relations and fractures characterizing such identities. In this sense, the book's wider importance lies in the understandings it can bring to the construction of settler identities in a post-colonial world.
Cultural Geographies
This is an important and courageous book that deserves a wide readership.
American Anthropologist
Dominy's book is useful for complementing anthropological work on indigenous people's relationship with their environs with a description of what are, after all, commercial pastoralists in a capitalist society.
Royal Anthropological Institute Of Great Britain and Ireland
This ethnography would make a fine addition to any applied anthropology syllabus, and will reward all readers with an interest in exploring the ways in which an environment is known and valued by those who have learnt to call it home.
Anthropological Forum

Goodreads reviews for Calling the Station Home


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