The Tuareg (Kel Tamasheq) are an ancient nomadic people who have inhabited the Sahara, one of the most extreme environments in the world, for millennia. In what ways have the lives of the Tuareg changed, and what roles do they have, in a modern and increasingly globalized world? Here, leading scholars explore the many facets of contemporary Tuareg existence: from transnational identity to international politics, from economy to social structure, from music to beauty, from mobility to slavery.
This book provides a comprehensive portrait of Saharan life in transition, presenting an important new theoretical approach to the anthropology and history of the region. Dealing with issues of mobility, cosmopolitanism, and transnational movements, this is essential reading for students and scholars of the history, culture and society of the Tuareg, of nomadic peoples, and of North Africa more widely. This book is the first comprehensive study of the Tuareg today, exploring the ways in which the Tuareg themselves are moving global.
Author(s): Anja Fischer, Ines Kohl
Series: Library of Modern Middle East Studies 91
Publisher: I.B.Tauris
Year: 2010
Language: English
Pages: xii+308
Tags: Cultural;Anthropology;Politics & Social Sciences;Sociology;Abuse;Class;Death;Marriage & Family;Medicine;Race Relations;Rural;Social Theory;Urban;Politics & Social Sciences;International & World Politics;Arms Control;Diplomacy;Security;Trades & Tariffs;Treaties;African;Asian;Australian & Oceanian;Canadian;Caribbean & Latin American;European;Middle Eastern;Russian & Former Soviet Union;Politics & Government;Politics & Social Sciences;Civics & Citizenship;Specific Topics;Politics & Government;Polit
1. Tuareg Moving Global: An Introduction – Ines Kohl and Anja Fischer
Part I: Where is Saharan Anthropology Going?
2. Research and Nomads in the Age of Globalization – Anja Fischer
3. Tuareg Networks: An Integrated Approach to Mobility and Stasis – Alessandra Giuffrida
4. Tuareg City Blues: Cultural Capital in a Global Cosmopole – Baz Lecocq
Part II: From Past to Present – Ongoing Discourses
5. Foreign Cloth and Kel Ewey Identity – Gerd Spittler
6. Genesis and Change in the Socio-political Structure of the Tuareg – Dida Badi
7. Tuareg Trajectories of Slavery: Preliminary Reflections on a Changing Field – Benedetta Rossi
Part III: Diversified Norms and Values
8. The Price of Marriage: Shifting Boundaries, Compromised Agency and the Effects of Globalization on Iklan Marriages – Annemarie Bouman
9. Debating Beauties: Contested and Changing Female Bodily Aesthetics of Fatness among the Tuareg – Susan Rasmussen
10. Libya, the ‘Europe of Ishumar’: Between Losing and Reinventing Tradition – Ines Kohl
11. The Ishumar Guitar: Emergence, Circulation and Evolution, from the Diasporic Performances to the World Scene – Nadia Belalimat
12. Between the Worlds: Tuareg as Entrepreneurs in Tourism – Marko Scholze
Part IV: Sahara – Global Playground
13. Ambiguous Meanings of Ikufar and their Role in Development Projects – Sarah Lunacek
14. Resisting Imperialism: Tuareg Threaten US, Chinese and Other Foreign Interests – Jeremy Keenan