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OverviewAcross the pine forests and deserts of America, there are mock Middle Eastern villages, mostly hidden from public view. Containing mosques, restaurants, street signs, graffiti in Arabic, and Iraqi role-players, these villages serve as military training sites for cultural literacy and special operations, both seen as crucial to victory in the Global War on Terror. In her gripping and highly original ethnography, anthropologist Nomi Stone explores US military predeployment training exercises and the lifeworlds of the Iraqi role-players employed within the mock villages, as they act out to mourn, bargain, and die like the wartime adversary or ally. Spanning fieldwork across the United States and Jordan, Pinelandia traces the devastating consequences of a military project that seeks to turn human beings into wartime technologies recruited to translate, mediate, and collaborate. Theorizing and enacting a field poetics, this work enlarges the ethnographic project into new cross-disciplinary worlds. Pinelandia is a political phenomenology of American empire and Iraq in the twenty-first century. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Nomi StonePublisher: University of California Press Imprint: University of California Press Volume: 8 ISBN: 9780520344365ISBN 10: 0520344367 Pages: 308 Publication Date: 11 October 2022 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsContents Acknowledgments [Field Poem] Introduction: The Pins Fall through the Pines [Field Poem] 1. The Making of Human Technology [Field Poem] 2. The Iraq Warscape and the Cultural Turn [Field Poem] 3. The Theaters of War [Field Poem] 4. Left and Right Limits [Field Poem] 5. Affective Maneuvers [Field Poem] 6. Becoming Human Technology [Field Poem] Conclusion: The Pins Fall through the Pines [Field Poem] Epilogue: Field Poetry Notes Bibliography IndexReviews[Pinelandia] is a defining epilogue that will speak on multiple levels to established academics, multi-modal ethnographers, and emerging anthropologists seeking to shape (or more rigorously reinforce) the role of poetry both in the generation of knowledge as well as in the expression of ethno-encounters. * Anthro Book Forum * """[Pinelandia] is a defining epilogue that will speak on multiple levels to established academics, multi-modal ethnographers, and emerging anthropologists seeking to shape (or more rigorously reinforce) the role of poetry both in the generation of knowledge as well as in the expression of ethno-encounters."" * Anthro Book Forum *" Author InformationNomi Stone is an award-winning anthropologist and poet. An Assistant Professor of Poetry at the University of Texas, Dallas, she was most recently a Postdoctoral Fellow in Anthropology at Princeton. She is author of two ethnographic collections of poetry, Stranger's Notebook and Kill Class, and her poems appear in The Atlantic, The New Republic, The Nation, and widely elsewhere. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |