Verging on Extra-Vagance: Anthropology, History, Religion, Literature, Arts . . . Showbiz

Verging on Extra-Vagance: Anthropology, History, Religion, Literature, Arts . . . Showbiz

by James A. Boon
Verging on Extra-Vagance: Anthropology, History, Religion, Literature, Arts . . . Showbiz

Verging on Extra-Vagance: Anthropology, History, Religion, Literature, Arts . . . Showbiz

by James A. Boon

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Overview

In this book, James Boon ranges through history and around the globe in a series of provocative reflections on the limitations, attractions, and ambiguities of cultural interpretation. The book reflects the unusual keyword of its title, extra-vagance, a term Thoreau used to refer to thought that skirts traditional boundaries. Boon follows Thoreau's lead by broaching subjects as diverse as Balinese ritual, Montaigne, Chaucer, Tarzan, Perry Mason, opera, and the ideas of Jacques Derrida, Ruth Benedict, Kenneth Burke, and Mary Douglas. He makes creative and often playful leaps among eclectic texts and rituals that do not hold single, fixed meanings, but numerous, changing, and exceedingly specific ones.


Boon opens by exploring links between ritual and reading, focusing on commentaries about the seclusion of menstruating women in Native American culture, trance dances in Bali, and circumcision (or lack of it) in contrasting religions. He considers the ironies of "first-person ethnography" by telling stories from his own fieldwork, reflecting on ethnological museums, and making seriocomic connections between Mark Twain and Marcel Mauss. In expansive discussions that touch on Manhattan and Sri Lanka, the Louvre and the "World of Coca-Cola" museum, willfully obscure academic theory and shamelessly commercial show business, Boon underlines the inadequacies of simple ideologies and pat generalizations. The book is a profound and eloquent exploration of cultural comparison by one of America's most original and innovative anthropologists.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691231150
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 06/08/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

James A. Boon is Professor of Anthropology at Princeton University. His researches bridge Indonesian studies, Euro-American colonial and intellectual history, and philosophies of synaesthesic arts and experience. His works include From Symbolism to Structuralism, The Anthropological Romance of Bali, Other Tribes, Other Scribes, and Affinities and Extremes.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface: AnThoreaupology: An Invitation
Rehearsals3
An Endlessly Extra-Vagant Scholar: Kenneth Burke3
A Similar Genre: Opera9
Plus Melville, Cavell, Commodity-Life; Showbiz14
Pt. 1Rituals, Rereading, Rhetorical Turns21
Ch. 1Re Menses: Rereading Ruth Benedict, Ultraobjectively23
Ch. 2Of Foreskins: (Un)Circumcision, Religious Histories, Difficult Description (Montaigne/Remondino)43
Ch. 3About a Footnote: Between-the-Wars Bali: Its Relics Regained73
Interlude: Essay-etudes and Tristimania97
Pt. 2Multimediations: Coincidence, Memory, Magics101
Ch. 4Cosmopolitan Moments: As-if Confessions of an Ethnographer-Tourist (Echoey "Cosmomes")103
Ch. 5Why Museums Make Me Sad (Eccentric Musings)124
Ch. 6Litterytoor 'n' Anthropolygee: An Experimental Wedding of Incongruous Styles from Mark Twain and Marcel Mauss143
Pt. 3Cross-over Studies, Seriocomic Critique167
A Little Polemic, Quizzically169
Ch. 7Against Coping Across Cultures: Self-help Semiotics Rebuffed176
Ch. 8Errant Anthropology, with Apologies to Chaucer191
Ch. 9Margins and Hierarchies and Rhetorics That Subjugate198
Ch. 10Evermore Derrida, Always the Same (What Gives?)211
Ch. 11Taking Torgovnick as She Takes Others221
Ch. 12Rerun (1980s): Mary Douglas's Grid/Group Grilled230
Ch. 13Update (1990s): Coca-Cola Consumes Baudrillard, and a Balinese (Putu) Consumes Coca-Cola249
Encores and Envoi: Burke, Cavell, etc., Unforgotten263
Acknowledgments and Credits279
Notes283
References315
Index357

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"James Boon is one of this country's most exciting theorists and practitioners of cultural comparativism. The book is an exemplary work on, and of, cultural translation and the hazards thereof. It is marvelously conceived, brilliantly executed, and almost astonishing in the range of its erudition."—Marc Manganaro, Rutgers University

"At a moment when much of 'cultural studies' proceeds without a broadly comparativist framework and in opposition to anthropological relativism, Boon embraces both. This is important and gutsy-and it is done with a genuine sense of pleasure and even beauty. There is really nothing else quite like this work."—Daniel A. Segal, Pitzer College

Segal

At a moment when much of 'cultural studies' proceeds without a broadly comparativist framework and in opposition to anthropological relativism, Boon embraces both. This is important and gutsy-and it is done with a genuine sense of pleasure and even beauty. There is really nothing else quite like this work.
Daniel A. Segal, Pitzer College

Marc Manganaro

James Boon is one of this country's most exciting theorists and practitioners of cultural comparativism. The book is an exemplary work on, and of, cultural translation and the hazards thereof. It is marvelously conceived, brilliantly executed, and almost astonishing in the range of its erudition.
Marc Manganaro, Rutgers University

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