Beyond Swat
History, Society and Economy Along the Afghanistan-Pakistan Frontier
Columbia University Press
Published on 26. March 2013
Book
Hardback
362 pages
978-0-231-70350-5 (ISBN)
Description
Beyond Swat addresses Fredrik Barth's seminal work, Political Leadership Among Swat Pathans and its reception in relation to contemporary developments in Swat and the larger Afghanistan-Pakistan region. Swat is a Pakistani district located near the Afghan-Pakistan border. This volume explores the relevance of Barth's work and the debates it has generated in scholarship on the key dynamics of the region and its people. The contributors are anthropologists and historians with long-standing research experience in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as a deep familiarity with one or more of the region's complex languages. Each chapter explores different, though interconnected, aspects of the region's culture, society, and politics throughout history, relating these themes to issues in the Swat debate initiated by Barth more than fifty years ago. While contributors situate their discussions within the context of specific socio-historic settings, they do not limit their conclusions to those contexts. Rather, like Barth, they assert the relevance of their findings to wider debates on the dynamics of this and comparable "frontier" regions.
Reviews / Votes
This is an impressive volume, important for its focus on the dangerous, and all too pervasive, tendency of journalists and academics to sideline class and politics in favour of cultural stereotypes. Instead, these deeply informed articles by expert historians and anthropologists confirm over and over the importance of taking into account, as the editors put it, 'the common human modes of behaving' that are characteristic of the Afghanistan-Pakistan region, both historically and in the present. -- Barbara D. Metcalf, author of Husain Ahmad Madani: Islam and the Jihad for India's Freedom and editor of Islam in South Asia in Practice Beyond Swat is a must-read. Its contributors offer original insight into the region's changing relations to economy, faith, language, and the contested meanings of loyalty and belonging. This volume shatters received wisdom and joins the specifics of the regional history and ethnography of the Afghanistan-Pakistan frontier to the main currents of social thought. -- Dale F. Eickelman, author of The Middle East and Central Asia: An Anthropological ApproachMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Weight
454 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-231-70350-5 (9780231703505)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Magnus Marsden is senior lecturer in social anthropology at the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Benjamin Hopkins is assistant professor of history and international affairs at George Washington University and the author of The Making of Modern Afghanistan.