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    Anthropologist as Anti-Christ: Positioning and Reciprocity in San Miguel Acatán, Guatemala

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    Author
    Jafek, Timothy B.
    Issue Date
    1998
    Keywords
    San Miguel Acatán
    Guatemala
    Maya
    reciprocity
    community
    production of knowledge
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Arizona Anthropologist #13: pp. 83-100, ©1998 Association of Student Anthropologists, Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
    Publisher
    University of Arizona, Department of Anthropology
    Journal
    Arizona Anthropologist
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10150/110215
    Abstract
    The accusation by some villagers that I was an Anti-Christ provides an opportunity to reflect on the production of anthropological knowledge. The production of knowledge by anthropologists must not only take into account the personal characteristics of the anthropologist but also the ways in which the culture the anthropologist studies classifies that anthropologist, thereby making available to him or her certain ways of knowing. I my case, as an unmarried man with no visible means of economic support, I appeared similar to others, like Earthlords, and priests, who offered villagers Faustian bargains. The deals' dangers lay in the fact that the exchanges occurred outside of the moral and social frameworks which undergird the community. Thus, their accusation of me as antithetical to the community opens an opportunity to consider the nature of that community.
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en_US
    ISSN
    1062-1601
    Collections
    Arizona Anthropologist: Issue #13 (1998)

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