Storytracking

Texts, Stories, and Histories in Central Australia
ISBN13: 9780195115888ISBN10: 0195115880 Paperback, 304 pages

Also available:

Hardback
Jan 1998,  In Stock

Price:

$60.00 (04)

Description

Storytracking is a work of theory and application. It is both a study of history and culture and the academic issues accompanying the interpretation and observation of other peoples. Sam Gill writes about Central Australia, but, more importantly, he writes about the business of trying to live responsibly and decisively in a postmodern world faced with irreconcilable diversity and complexity, with undeniable ambiguity and uncertainty.
Storytracking includes engaging accounts of many of the colorful figures involved in the nineteenth-century development of Central Australia, and it is an argument for a multiperspectival theory of history. It presents descriptions of an important aboriginal culture--the Arrernte--and it critically examines ethnography. It exposes the colonialist underbelly of all modern academic culture study, yet it embraces the situation as one of creative potential outlining an interactivist epistemology with which to negotiate the classical alternatives of objectivism and subjectivism. Gill presents an examination of the emergent academic study of religion focused on two exemplary scholars--Mircea Eliade and Jonathan Smith--offering a play theory of religion as the basis for innovative critical discussions of text, comparison, interpretation, the definition of religion, academic writing style, and the role of "the other."
Based on painstakingly detailed research, Gill exposes disturbing and confounding dimensions of the modern world, particularly academia. Yet, beyond the pessimism that often characterizes postmodernity, he charts an optimistic and creative course framed in the terms of play.

Reviews

"Sam Gill is an engaging writer, and he charmed me in a pleasant way....it is in fact a thoughtful disquisition on our academic project in the human sciences....[the book] well repays the effort of close reading and rereading."--Journal of Anthropological Research

Product Details

304 pages; 6-1/8 x 9-1/4; ISBN13: 978-0-19-511588-8ISBN10: 0-19-511588-0

About the Author(s)

Sam D. Gill, Professor of Religious Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder

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