Social Anthropology - violence
Description
Usin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing examples from Shamanism, Colonialism and the Wildman, discuss the ways in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in which violence challenges conventional modes of representation.
(a) Could we say that Casement offered a ‘realist’ representation of the Putumayo rubber boom?
(b) Could we say that the violence of the rubber boom exhaust a realist in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">interpretation?
(c) The above two questions might be used to structure a broad answer that reflects on how violence disrupts sense makin" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">in" rel="nofollow">ing, and language, together with anthropological representation.