James Clifford
Personal Information
Description
Interdisciplinary scholar whose work combines perspectives from history, literature, history of science, and anthropology.
Books
On the edges of anthropology
"A key figure in theory and criticism, [author] has published seminal essays on topics ranging from art and identity to museum studies and fieldwork. This collection of interviews captures [author] in exchanges with his critics in Brazil, Hawai'i, Japan, Portugal, and the United Kingdom, offering a set of provocative reflections on an intellectual career in transformation."--Back cover.
Routes
In this collage of essays, meditations, poems, and travel reports, Clifford takes travel and its difficult companion, translation, as openings into a complex modernity. He contemplates a world ever more connected yet not homogeneous, a global history proceeding from the fraught legacies of exploration, colonization, capitalist expansion, immigration, labor mobility, and tourism. Ranging from Highland New Guinea to northern California, from Vancouver to London, he probes current approaches to the interpretation and display of non-Western arts and cultures. Wherever people and things cross paths and where institutional forces work to discipline unruly encounters, Clifford's concern is with struggles to displace stereotypes, to recognize divergent histories, to sustain "postcolonial" and "tribal" identities in contexts of domination and globalization. Travel, diaspora, border crossing, self-location, the making of homes away from home: these are transcultural predicaments for the late twentieth century. The map that might account for them, the history of an entangled modernity, emerges here as an unfinished series of paths and negotiations, leading in many directions while returning again and again to the struggles and arts of cultural encounter, the impossible, inescapable tasks of translation.