Description

Book Synopsis
This title assesses the current state of knowledge concerning oil, integration, and conflict and formulates an anthropological research strategy to advance an understanding of oil and its vicissitudes.

Trade Review

This book is chiefly valuable for the nuanced, in-depth reporting of the cases, especially the violent ones. Valuable for scholars of resource conflict, and necessary reading for anyone deeply researching oil politics. · Choice

"Here is anthropology at its critical and relevant best. Nothing could be more topical than the role of oil in contemporary global turmoil and “the crazy curse” that it casts over all manner of human endeavour and hope. The essays in this important book offer major insights into the heart of the crisis of capital and the local cultural phantasmagoria expressing its cruel paradoxes. The ethnographic analyses expand important arguments in other disciplines (especially economics and political science) and demonstrate the valuable necessity of anthropological perspectives. This is a must read for anthropologists and those in other disciplines who are concerned with the dynamics of global power as this is exposed in the struggle over the control of scarce resources and its tragic human effects." · Bruce Kapferer, University of Bergen



Table of Contents

List of Figures

PART I: GENERALITIES

Chapter 1. The Crazy Curse and Crude Domination: Towards an Anthropology of Oil
Stephen Reyna and Andrea Behrends

Chapter 2. Oiling the Race to the Bottom
Jonathan Friedman

PART II: AFRICA

Chapter 3. Blood Oil: The Anatomy of a Petro-Insurgency in the Niger Delta, Nigeria
Michael Watts

Chapter 4. Fighting for oil when there is no oil yet – The Darfur-Chad border
Andrea Behrends

Chapter 5. Elfs and Witches: Oil Cleptocrats and the Destruction of Social Order in Congo-Brazzaville
Kajsa Ekholm Friedman

Chapter 6. Constituting Domination/Constructing Monsters:Imperialism, Cultural Desire, and anti-Beowulfs in the Chadian Petro-state
Stephen P. Reyna

PART III: LATIN AMERICA

Chapter 7. The Persistent Imaginary of ‘the People's Oil’: Nationalism, Globalisation and the Possibility of Another Country in Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela
John Gledhill

Chapter 8.“Now That the Petroleum is Ours:” Community Media, State Spectacle, and Oil Nationalism in Venezuela
Naomi Schiller

Chapter 9. Flashpoints of Sovereignty: Territorial Conflict and Natural Gas in Bolivia
Bret Gustafson

PART IV. POST-SOCIALIST RUSSIA

Chapter 10. Oil Without Conflict? The Anthropology of Industrialisation in Northern Russia
Florian Stammler

Chapter 11. ‘Against… Domination’: Oil and War in Chechnya
Galina Khizrieva and Stephen P. Reyna

Afterword Suggestions for a Second Reading: An Alternative Perspective on Contested Resources as an Explanation for Conflict
Günther Schlee

Notes on Contributors

Crude Domination An Anthropology of Oil

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A Hardback by Stephen Reyna, Günther Schlee

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    Publisher: Berghahn Books
    Publication Date: 10/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780857452559, 978-0857452559
    ISBN10: 085745255X

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This title assesses the current state of knowledge concerning oil, integration, and conflict and formulates an anthropological research strategy to advance an understanding of oil and its vicissitudes.

    Trade Review

    This book is chiefly valuable for the nuanced, in-depth reporting of the cases, especially the violent ones. Valuable for scholars of resource conflict, and necessary reading for anyone deeply researching oil politics. · Choice

    "Here is anthropology at its critical and relevant best. Nothing could be more topical than the role of oil in contemporary global turmoil and “the crazy curse” that it casts over all manner of human endeavour and hope. The essays in this important book offer major insights into the heart of the crisis of capital and the local cultural phantasmagoria expressing its cruel paradoxes. The ethnographic analyses expand important arguments in other disciplines (especially economics and political science) and demonstrate the valuable necessity of anthropological perspectives. This is a must read for anthropologists and those in other disciplines who are concerned with the dynamics of global power as this is exposed in the struggle over the control of scarce resources and its tragic human effects." · Bruce Kapferer, University of Bergen



    Table of Contents

    List of Figures

    PART I: GENERALITIES

    Chapter 1. The Crazy Curse and Crude Domination: Towards an Anthropology of Oil
    Stephen Reyna and Andrea Behrends

    Chapter 2. Oiling the Race to the Bottom
    Jonathan Friedman

    PART II: AFRICA

    Chapter 3. Blood Oil: The Anatomy of a Petro-Insurgency in the Niger Delta, Nigeria
    Michael Watts

    Chapter 4. Fighting for oil when there is no oil yet – The Darfur-Chad border
    Andrea Behrends

    Chapter 5. Elfs and Witches: Oil Cleptocrats and the Destruction of Social Order in Congo-Brazzaville
    Kajsa Ekholm Friedman

    Chapter 6. Constituting Domination/Constructing Monsters:Imperialism, Cultural Desire, and anti-Beowulfs in the Chadian Petro-state
    Stephen P. Reyna

    PART III: LATIN AMERICA

    Chapter 7. The Persistent Imaginary of ‘the People's Oil’: Nationalism, Globalisation and the Possibility of Another Country in Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela
    John Gledhill

    Chapter 8.“Now That the Petroleum is Ours:” Community Media, State Spectacle, and Oil Nationalism in Venezuela
    Naomi Schiller

    Chapter 9. Flashpoints of Sovereignty: Territorial Conflict and Natural Gas in Bolivia
    Bret Gustafson

    PART IV. POST-SOCIALIST RUSSIA

    Chapter 10. Oil Without Conflict? The Anthropology of Industrialisation in Northern Russia
    Florian Stammler

    Chapter 11. ‘Against… Domination’: Oil and War in Chechnya
    Galina Khizrieva and Stephen P. Reyna

    Afterword Suggestions for a Second Reading: An Alternative Perspective on Contested Resources as an Explanation for Conflict
    Günther Schlee

    Notes on Contributors

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