Newberry, Janice

Permanent URI for this collection

Browse

Recent Submissions

Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Item
    [Review of "Spiritual economies: Islam, globalization and the afterlife of development" by Daromir Rudnyckyj]
    (Canadian Anthropology Society, 2013) Newberry, Janice C.
    Book review
  • Item
    Double spaced: abstract labour in urban Kampung
    (Canadian Anthropology Society, 2008) Newberry, Janice C.
    Although kampung means village in neighbouring Malaysia, in Indonesia, it refers to dense neighbourhoods in cities. These neighbourhoods represent a community form reproduced through governance across various regimes but also through daily exchanges and support between inhabitants. Based on fieldwork in Yogyakarta, central Java, this paper considers the form of labour represented by these spatial enclaves and its connection to the reality of a community form produced both through administration as well as a local structure of feeling. The relationship of these imagined communities to questions of abstract labour is considered along with their relevance for contemporary urban anthropology.
  • Item
    Rituals of rule in the administered community: the Javanese slametan reconsidered
    (Cambridge University Press, 2006) Newberry, Janice C.
    Ethnographic work in an urban kampung in central Java reveals this community form to be both an administrative rationality and a set of locally meaningful social relations. The continued restatement of the relevance of community through the Javanese ritual meal known as the slametan and women’s roles in these rituals of commensality are the focus of this consideration. State sponsorship of housewives as community welfare workers extends the long arch of kampung community formation as the ground for the dispersion of rituals of rule into the lives of Indonesian citizens as well as working-class recuperation through rituals of community. State formation conceived as process draws attention to everyday kampung culture as the matrix for reproduction of both rule and working class neighbourhoods, and provides a perspective on the state that is resolutely low, attuned to both the realities of institutional structure and the repertoires and routines of everyday practise.