Paperback / softback | |
April 15, 2019 | |
9780295743950 | |
English | |
204 | |
13 b&w illus., 2 maps | |
9.00 Inches (US) | |
6.00 Inches (US) | |
.68 Pounds (US) | |
$32.00 USD, £22.99 GBP | |
v2.1 Reference | |
Hardback | |
April 15, 2019 | |
9780295745039 | |
English | |
204 | |
13 b&w illus., 2 maps | |
9.00 Inches (US) | |
6.00 Inches (US) | |
.9 Pounds (US) | |
$105.00 USD, £76.00 GBP | |
v2.1 Reference | |
Living with Oil and Coal
Resource Politics and Militarization in Northeast India
Anthropologist Dolly Kikon uses in-depth ethnographic accounts to address the complexity of Northeast India, a region between Southeast Asia and China where boundaries and borders are made, disputed, and maintained. Bringing a fresh and exciting direction to borderland studies, she explores the social bonds established through practices of resource extraction and the tensions these relations generate, focusing on peoples' love for the landscape and for the state, as well as for family, friends, and neighbors.
About the Authors
Reviews
"This is a versatile book that would be accessible for undergraduate audiences, yet contains complexity that would be of great interest for graduate audiences and scholars as well."
"Kikon's ethnography is rich, diverse, and makes an engaging read."—Contributions to Indian Sociology
"The strength of Kikon's work is...in the creativity and skill of its synthesis of existing theoretical work, applied to a new context and matched with local knowledge."—Anthropologica
"[A] beautiful and gripping account of the intimate layers of life, vio-lence and sovereignty pattered throughout the militarised carbon landscape of the foothills of Assam and Nagaland in North East India."—Postcolonial Studies
"[E]vocatively captures the intricacies and intimacies of daily life on this militarized resource frontier, drawing from stories, oral histories, and local myths, in spaces ranging from coal mines to oil rigs, rice fields to weekly markets and military checkpoints. Throughout, the book remains focused on the fragile and contested intimacies forged through trade, labor sharing, and love affairs across boundaries that are at once social, political, and ecological."—PoLAR: Political & Legal Anthropology Review
"[A] fantastic read, a book that speaks to scholars as well as general public. Kikon combines grounded ethnography with theoretical elabortation, setting a new standard of excellence for the anthropology of the North East."—Economic and Political Weekly
"Kikon has crafted the book skilfully with her narrative writing style...This book is an essential reading for those who want to understand the complex state-society dynamics in Northeast India."—Cultural Geographies
"Dolly Kikon's book, undoubtedly a fascinating work of ethnography, compels us to problematize seemingly unitary categories of hills and other land and waterscapes and also to think of the impact of extractive regimes not only on the environment but also on how environment then comes to exist for the human societies who experience them."—Seminar
"Interdisciplinary scholarship on the environment has much to gain from Kikon's book... The power of Kikon's ethnography lies in its subtle, and unromanticized, insistence onthe creativity and fortitude of those communities living amidst such extractive debris. Kikon's careful mapping of friendships, enmities, grieving, laughing, dying, working, loving, healing, teaching, struggling, and building helps us to see all of the fragile things that hold life together, and what we will still have to tend to once the oil is gone."—H-Net
"[S]uperb...what is truly the exceptional strength of the book [is] a richly textured ethnography of how individuals and communities make their lives in the shadows of a region transformed by extraction."—H-Net
Endorsements
"A richly detailed ethnographic study from the vantage point of the hill people that shows how the society, economy, and polity functions are seen [in Northeast India] by the people living there."—Arupjyoti Saikia, author of Forests and Ecological History of Assam, 1826-2000
"Living with Oil and Coal is full of stories that in their telling and retelling create and re-create relations among a range of actors, constructing borderlands as sites for citizenship, negotiations over sovereignty, transgressive love, and exchange. This book will change forever the way Northeast India is imagined, studied, and written about."—Nandini Sundar, professor, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi
Paperback / softback | |
April 15, 2019 | |
9780295743950 | |
English | |
204 | |
13 b&w illus., 2 maps | |
9.00 Inches (US) | |
6.00 Inches (US) | |
.68 Pounds (US) | |
$32.00 USD, £22.99 GBP | |
v2.1 Reference | |
Hardback | |
April 15, 2019 | |
9780295745039 | |
English | |
204 | |
13 b&w illus., 2 maps | |
9.00 Inches (US) | |
6.00 Inches (US) | |
.9 Pounds (US) | |
$105.00 USD, £76.00 GBP | |
v2.1 Reference | |
Other Titles by K. Sivaramakrishnan
Fukushima Futures
Ecologies of Empire in South Asia, 1400-1900
Sustaining Natures
Other Titles by K. Sivaramakrishnan
Fukushima Futures
Ecologies of Empire in South Asia, 1400-1900
Sustaining Natures
Other Titles from Culture, Place, and Nature
The Nature of Whiteness
Conjuring Property
Being and Place among the Tlingit
Other Titles in SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography
Indigenous Legalities, Pipeline Viscosities
From Borderland to Burgenland
The Right to Be Rural