An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel

This paper draws a distinction between an anthropology of the sea and an anthropology as sea travel – using the latter as an epistemological window to understand immigrants’ experiences of long-distance sea travel which have rarely been considered in the anthropology of immigrant societies. The pape...

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Main Author: Arnd Schneider
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Karl Franzens-Universität Graz 2015-09-01
Series:Mobile Culture Studies. The Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://unipub.uni-graz.at/mcsj/periodical/pageview/791944
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spelling doaj-2015e7434e1e4813a833bd96eba3e7222020-11-24T23:42:35ZdeuKarl Franzens-Universität GrazMobile Culture Studies. The Journal2413-91812413-91812015-09-0113152An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travelArnd SchneiderThis paper draws a distinction between an anthropology of the sea and an anthropology as sea travel – using the latter as an epistemological window to understand immigrants’ experiences of long-distance sea travel which have rarely been considered in the anthropology of immigrant societies. The paper reviews Bronislaw Malinowski’s own travel linked to some explorations of archetypical sea voyages among the Trobriand Islanders (Argonauts of the Western Pacific, 1922). In a further step, the ‘shipboard notes’ of Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Tristes Tropiques (1955) are used to consider what might have been gained if early and mid-20th century anthropologists had turned their ethnographic eye on ships, their crew and immigrants travelling on them. This paper then takes inspiration from early and mid-20th century anthropologists on sea voyages (not or only rarely related to immigrants’ travel), and applies insight from this to material from 20th century immigrants to Argentina. Though some of the empirical evidence has been published previously (Schneider 2000), it is here complemented with more recent material (from fieldwork in 2014), and interpreted in a new comparative and theoretical key.http://unipub.uni-graz.at/mcsj/periodical/pageview/791944sea voyagetransoceanic travelonboard ethnographyArgentinaepistemology
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
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author Arnd Schneider
spellingShingle Arnd Schneider
An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
Mobile Culture Studies. The Journal
sea voyage
transoceanic travel
onboard ethnography
Argentina
epistemology
author_facet Arnd Schneider
author_sort Arnd Schneider
title An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
title_short An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
title_full An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
title_fullStr An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
title_full_unstemmed An anthropology of the sea voyage - Prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
title_sort anthropology of the sea voyage - prolegomena to an epistemology of transoceanic travel
publisher Karl Franzens-Universität Graz
series Mobile Culture Studies. The Journal
issn 2413-9181
2413-9181
publishDate 2015-09-01
description This paper draws a distinction between an anthropology of the sea and an anthropology as sea travel – using the latter as an epistemological window to understand immigrants’ experiences of long-distance sea travel which have rarely been considered in the anthropology of immigrant societies. The paper reviews Bronislaw Malinowski’s own travel linked to some explorations of archetypical sea voyages among the Trobriand Islanders (Argonauts of the Western Pacific, 1922). In a further step, the ‘shipboard notes’ of Claude Lévi-Strauss’s Tristes Tropiques (1955) are used to consider what might have been gained if early and mid-20th century anthropologists had turned their ethnographic eye on ships, their crew and immigrants travelling on them. This paper then takes inspiration from early and mid-20th century anthropologists on sea voyages (not or only rarely related to immigrants’ travel), and applies insight from this to material from 20th century immigrants to Argentina. Though some of the empirical evidence has been published previously (Schneider 2000), it is here complemented with more recent material (from fieldwork in 2014), and interpreted in a new comparative and theoretical key.
topic sea voyage
transoceanic travel
onboard ethnography
Argentina
epistemology
url http://unipub.uni-graz.at/mcsj/periodical/pageview/791944
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