Description

Book Synopsis

Through the concept of "social navigation," this book sheds light on the mobilization of urban youth in West Africa. Social navigation offers a perspective on praxis in situations of conflict and turmoil. It provides insights into the interplay between objective structures and subjective agency, thus enabling us to make sense of the opportunistic, sometimes fatalistic and tactical ways in which young people struggle to expand the horizons of possibility in a world of conflict, turmoil and diminishing resources.



Trade Review

“…represents a vivid effort to understand the complex world of war and poverty. In this masterful work, Vigh combines an innovative methodology in fieldworks with tribalismo theories. Youth, in Guinea-Bissau, is circumscribed to the dilemma of migrating or perish…Vigh provides a serious framework to understand how violence works. This is, undoubtedly, one of the best books I have ever read on this topic. Magisterially explained throughout the ten chapters that form the project, Vigh reveals how poverty is conducive to warfare.” · Nómadas: Critical Journal of the Social Sciences

“For the increasingly numerous anthropologists [specializing in Peace and Conflict Studies in Anthropology] Henrik Vigh's book on young combatants in the war in Guinea-Bissau should be compulsory reading material.” · JRAI

“The book is remarkably successful in this ambitious endeavour [to address the tensions between structure and agency through the author's concept of social navigation] because it combines solidly researched and eloquently formulated ethnography with engagement of a wide range of theory.... it merits a cover-to-cover read.” · Journal of Peace Research

“In his excellent [book], Vigh offers a sophisticated and highly insightful analysis of mobilization and soldiering among contemporary urban African youths...This is a very welcome empirically based and theoretically sophisticated contribution to our understanding of one of Africa’s recent ‘small wars’.” · Social Anthropology

“Though written accessibly, its principal preoccupations are theoretical. Vigh draws on a range of theorists… [and] social philosophers…Along the way he provides useful excursions through the literature on contemporary violence and African liberation movements…[The book] is among the most exciting and important contributions available today.” · Ethnos

"Vigh has done a superb job in shedding new light on the civil war in Guinea-Bissau, and especially in showing the close linkages between the history of the Aguentas and that of political turmoil in the West African country…the quality of the research and the book’s refreshing approach to the analysis of youth involvement in conflict…should appeal to scholars and practitioners interested in conflict dynamics in Africa." · African Affairs

"This is a timely, empirically solid, and theoretically sophisticated contribution to our understanding of one of Africa’s recent 'small wars'…[that] throws new light on the 'crisis of youth' in post-colonial Africa, provides a fascinating critique of the notion of 'child' soldiers, explores the ways in which youth internalise the external world in negative self-images, [and] deepens our understanding of 'civil war' in Africa." · Michael Jackson, Harvard Divinity School



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

PART I: INTRODUCTION

Chapter 1. Mbuli the Victorious: The Micro-history of an Aguenta
Chapter 2. Perspectives and Positions

PART II: THE AGUENTAS

Chapter 3. Becoming Aguentas
Chapter 4. Wars without Enemies

PART III: SOCIAL NAVIGATION

Chapter 5. The Social Moratorium of Youth
Chapter 6. Dubriagem and Social Navigation: Constructing Social Trajectories through War

PART IV: ON SHIFTING GROUND

Chapter 7. Inhabiting Unstable Terrains: The Everyday of Decline and Conflict
Chapter 8. From Negritude to Ineptitude: On Horizons and Broken Imaginaries

PART V: IN APPEASEMENT?

Chapter 9. Recategorising Men as Children: Bottom-up Reconciliation
Chapter 10. Closure

Bibliography
Index

Navigating Terrains of War: Youth and Soldiering

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    A Hardback by Henrik E. Vigh

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      View other formats and editions of Navigating Terrains of War: Youth and Soldiering by Henrik E. Vigh

      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/05/2006
      ISBN13: 9781845451486, 978-1845451486
      ISBN10: 1845451481

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Through the concept of "social navigation," this book sheds light on the mobilization of urban youth in West Africa. Social navigation offers a perspective on praxis in situations of conflict and turmoil. It provides insights into the interplay between objective structures and subjective agency, thus enabling us to make sense of the opportunistic, sometimes fatalistic and tactical ways in which young people struggle to expand the horizons of possibility in a world of conflict, turmoil and diminishing resources.



      Trade Review

      “…represents a vivid effort to understand the complex world of war and poverty. In this masterful work, Vigh combines an innovative methodology in fieldworks with tribalismo theories. Youth, in Guinea-Bissau, is circumscribed to the dilemma of migrating or perish…Vigh provides a serious framework to understand how violence works. This is, undoubtedly, one of the best books I have ever read on this topic. Magisterially explained throughout the ten chapters that form the project, Vigh reveals how poverty is conducive to warfare.” · Nómadas: Critical Journal of the Social Sciences

      “For the increasingly numerous anthropologists [specializing in Peace and Conflict Studies in Anthropology] Henrik Vigh's book on young combatants in the war in Guinea-Bissau should be compulsory reading material.” · JRAI

      “The book is remarkably successful in this ambitious endeavour [to address the tensions between structure and agency through the author's concept of social navigation] because it combines solidly researched and eloquently formulated ethnography with engagement of a wide range of theory.... it merits a cover-to-cover read.” · Journal of Peace Research

      “In his excellent [book], Vigh offers a sophisticated and highly insightful analysis of mobilization and soldiering among contemporary urban African youths...This is a very welcome empirically based and theoretically sophisticated contribution to our understanding of one of Africa’s recent ‘small wars’.” · Social Anthropology

      “Though written accessibly, its principal preoccupations are theoretical. Vigh draws on a range of theorists… [and] social philosophers…Along the way he provides useful excursions through the literature on contemporary violence and African liberation movements…[The book] is among the most exciting and important contributions available today.” · Ethnos

      "Vigh has done a superb job in shedding new light on the civil war in Guinea-Bissau, and especially in showing the close linkages between the history of the Aguentas and that of political turmoil in the West African country…the quality of the research and the book’s refreshing approach to the analysis of youth involvement in conflict…should appeal to scholars and practitioners interested in conflict dynamics in Africa." · African Affairs

      "This is a timely, empirically solid, and theoretically sophisticated contribution to our understanding of one of Africa’s recent 'small wars'…[that] throws new light on the 'crisis of youth' in post-colonial Africa, provides a fascinating critique of the notion of 'child' soldiers, explores the ways in which youth internalise the external world in negative self-images, [and] deepens our understanding of 'civil war' in Africa." · Michael Jackson, Harvard Divinity School



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      PART I: INTRODUCTION

      Chapter 1. Mbuli the Victorious: The Micro-history of an Aguenta
      Chapter 2. Perspectives and Positions

      PART II: THE AGUENTAS

      Chapter 3. Becoming Aguentas
      Chapter 4. Wars without Enemies

      PART III: SOCIAL NAVIGATION

      Chapter 5. The Social Moratorium of Youth
      Chapter 6. Dubriagem and Social Navigation: Constructing Social Trajectories through War

      PART IV: ON SHIFTING GROUND

      Chapter 7. Inhabiting Unstable Terrains: The Everyday of Decline and Conflict
      Chapter 8. From Negritude to Ineptitude: On Horizons and Broken Imaginaries

      PART V: IN APPEASEMENT?

      Chapter 9. Recategorising Men as Children: Bottom-up Reconciliation
      Chapter 10. Closure

      Bibliography
      Index

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