Editors’ Introduction

Contextualizing Homes and Fields in the Ethnography of India

Authors

  • Amy L. Allocco Elon University
  • Jennifer D. Ortegren Middlebury College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.18348

Keywords:

Editorial

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Author Biographies

  • Amy L. Allocco , Elon University

    Amy L. Allocco is an ethnographer whose research focuses on vernacular Hinduism, especially contemporary ritual traditions and women’s religious practices in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu, where she has been studying and conducting fieldwork for 25 years. She has published on snake goddess traditions, the narrative strategies of a female Hindu healer, and ritual innovation. Allocco’s current project, “Domesticating the Dead: Invitation and Installation Rituals in Tamil South India”, delineates the repertoire of ritual relationships that Hindus maintain with their dead kin and analyzes the ceremonies to honor deceased relatives called pūvāt˙ aikkāri (“the woman wearing flowers”).

  • Jennifer D. Ortegren, Middlebury College

    Jennifer D. Ortegren is an ethnographer of South Asian religions whose work focuses on the intersections of religion and class among upwardly mobile women, and their families, in Udaipur, Rajasthan. She has published on the everyday and ritual lives of emerging middleclass Hindu women and is currently developing a project among Muslim women, including how class mobility impacts relationships between neighbors from diverse religious backgrounds and the role of women in mediating these relationships.

References

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De Neve, Geert 2006 Hidden Reflexivity: Assistants, Informants and the Creation of Anthropological Knowledge. In Critical Journeys: The Making of Anthropologists, edited by Geert De Neve and Maya Unnithan-Kumar, 67–89. Hampshire: Ashgate. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315575032-5

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Narayan, Kirin 1993 How Native is a “Native” Anthropologist? American Anthropologist 95(3): 671–86. https://doi.org/10.1525/aa.1993.95.3.02a00070

Srinivas, Tulasi 2018 The Cow in the Elevator: An Anthropology of Wonder. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Unnithan-Kumar, Maya, and Geert De Neve 2006 Introduction: Producing Fields, Selves and Anthropology. In Critical Journeys: The Making of Anthropologists, edited by Geert De Neve and Maya Unnithan-Kumar, 1–16. Hampshire: Ashgate. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315575032-1

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Published

2020-11-05

Issue

Section

Editorial

How to Cite

Allocco , A. L. ., & Ortegren, J. D. (2020). Editors’ Introduction: Contextualizing Homes and Fields in the Ethnography of India. Fieldwork in Religion, 15(1-2), 7–17. https://doi.org/10.1558/firn.18348