Crossing the Current: Aftermaths of War along the Huallaga River

Author:   Richard Kernaghan
Publisher:   Stanford University Press
ISBN:  

9781503603295


Pages:   352
Publication Date:   20 September 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Crossing the Current: Aftermaths of War along the Huallaga River


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Overview

In contemporary accounts of the Shining Path insurgency and Peru's internal war, the Upper Huallaga Valley has largely been overlooked-despite its former place as the country's main cocaine-producing region. From afar, the Upper Huallaga became a political and legal no-man's-land. Up close, vibrant networks of connection endured despite strict controls on human habitation and movement. This book asks what happens to such a place once prolonged conflict has ostensibly passed. How have ordinary encounters with land, territory, and law, and with the river that runs through them all, been altered in the aftermaths of war? Gathering stories and images to render the experiences of transportation workers who have ferried passengers and things across and along the river for decades, Richard Kernaghan elaborates a notion of legal topographies to understand how landscape interventions shape routes, craft territories, and muddle temporalities. Drawing on personal narratives and everyday practices of transit, this ethnography conveys how prior times of violence have silently accrued: in bridges and roads demolished, then rebuilt; in makeshift moorings that facilitate both licit and illegal trades; and above all through the river, a liquid barrier and current with unstable banks, whose intricate mesh of tributaries partitions terrains now laden with material traces and political effects of a recent yet far from finished past.

Full Product Details

Author:   Richard Kernaghan
Publisher:   Stanford University Press
Imprint:   Stanford University Press
ISBN:  

9781503603295


ISBN 10:   1503603296
Pages:   352
Publication Date:   20 September 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

"""This is a theoretically sophisticated, beautifully written book. In its lyrical style and its approach to letting stories, objects, and descriptions speak for themselves, the book situates itself with other stylistically innovative ethnographies that eschew a distinction between 'academic' and 'creative' writing. The work is fresh, individual, and makes critical contributions to scholarship on the aftermath of war and post-conflict spaces."" —Elizabeth Ferry, Brandeis University ""Crossing the Current illustrates how to do situated ethnography while building solid theory. With beautiful sweeping writing, Kernaghan calls on us to reimagine politics from a sensitive plane, and to rethink history as a plot of enduring connections."" —Mario Rufer, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana, Xochimilco"


This is a theoretically sophisticated, beautifully written book. In its lyrical style and its approach to letting stories, objects, and descriptions speak for themselves, the book situates itself with other stylistically innovative ethnographies that eschew a distinction between 'academic' and 'creative' writing. The work is fresh, individual, and makes critical contributions to scholarship on the aftermath of war and post-conflict spaces. -Elizabeth Ferry, Brandeis University Crossing the Current illustrates how to do situated ethnography while building solid theory. With beautiful sweeping writing, Kernaghan calls on us to reimagine politics from a sensitive plane, and to rethink history as a plot of enduring connections. -Mario Rufer, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Xochimilco


Author Information

Richard Kernaghan is Associate Professor of Anthropology at the University of Florida. He is the author of Coca's Gone: Of Might and Right in the Huallaga Post-Boom (Stanford, 2009).

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