Education
M.A. Folklore, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
1979, Ph.D. Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1989
Research
Narrative and history, culture theory, the politics of religion, comparative colonial studies, Christian missions, citizenship and subjectivity, nationalism, gender studies, violence, military culture, Indonesia, southern U.S.
Mary Margaret Steedly, Professor has focused on the Karo Bataks, a kinship-based society of the North Sumatran uplands deeply implicated in colonial and postcolonial projects of modernity, development and nation-building. Her first book, Hanging without a Rope: Narrative Experience in Colonial and Postcolonial Karoland (Princeton University Press, 1993) received the Victor Turner Prize for Ethnographic Writing in 1994. Based on three years' ethnographic research with Karo spirit mediums and extensive study of colonial sources, this work approaches Karo historical experience through stories of encounters with spirits.
She is now completing a second book, Rifle Reports: Gender, Nationalism and Peasant Resistance in the Karo Area, 1945-1950, which explores the Indonesian war of independence of Karo participants. Like her earlier work, this book is concerned with the mutually constituting relations of narrative and experience, but it moves beyond the personal realm of belief to consider questions of subjectivity and state formation in the political domain of agency, citizenship and social violence. Supported by a grant from the John C. and Katherine T. MacArthur Foundation Program on Security and Sustainability, her next project will turn to contemporary American culture, and to the paradoxical centrality of undemocratic institutions in a democratic society. During the calendar year 2000 she will be conducting ethnographic fieldwork at The Citadel Military College of South Carolina, focusing on the construction and inculcation of a particular "military culture" of soldier-citizens. |
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Anthropology 1870
Island Southeast Asia: Circulating Cultures
An introduction to island Southeast Asia (Indonesia, Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei) emphasizing circulations of people, goods, ideas, beliefs, wealth, power, and images. Island Southeast Asia has a long history of involvement in global networks of economic distribution, exchange and appropriation. We will focus on cultural dimensions of such circulations, with topics to include urban gridlock, gay slang, terrorism, theme parks, female labor, political crisis, new media, democratization, and the lifestyles of the rich and famous. |