Utopian Movements, Enactments and Subjectivities among Youth in the Global South
Drawing on fine-grained ethnographies from Bissau, Chile, China, Egypt, Ecuador and Nepal, this volume explores how politically, religiously and (sub-)culturally inspired Utopias motivate youth in the Global South to imagine, enact and embody what was missing in the past and present.
As a fluid age cohort and a social category between childhood and adulthood and hence with tenuous links to the status quo youth are variously described as at risk, as victims of precarious and unpredictable circumstances or as agents of social change who embody the future. From this future-oriented generational perspective, youth are often mobilised to individually and collectively imagine, enact and embody Utopian futures as alternatives to reigning orders that moulded their subjectivities but simultaneously fail them. The contributions to this book look at how divergent Utopias inspire strategies, whereby young people come together in transient communities to catch a fleeting future, cultivate alternative subjectivities and thus assume a sense of minimum control over their life trajectories, if only momentarily.
As youth enact and embody their aspirations for the future in the present, this book will be of interest to those researching how utopian visions shape practices and subjectivities of youth in the present.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power.
Oscar Salemink is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, and an Adjunct Professor in the Institute for Religion, Politics and Society at ACU Melbourne, Australia. He has conducted field research in Vietnam, China and Europe, amongst other places, and his current research interests concern religion, heritage, museums and contemporary art.
Susanne Bregnbk is an anthropologist and Associate Professor at University College Copenhagen, Denmark. Her book Fragile Elite: The Dilemmas of Chinas Top University Students (2016) explored the predicament of Chinese youth in a society undergoing rapid transformation. Her current work focuses on the encounter between migrant families and the Danish welfare state.
Dan Vesalainen Hirslund is a social anthropologist from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. He works primarily on South Asian politics and economy, and has conducted extended fieldwork in Sri Lanka and Nepal on refugees, Maoism and informal labour. He is currently exploring connections between capitalist globalisation and the construction industry.
Utopian Movements, Enactments and Subjectivities among Youth in the Global South
Ethnographic Perspectives
Edited by
Oscar Salemink, Susanne Bregnbk and Dan Vesalainen Hirslund
First published 2020
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Introduction, Chapters 14, 6, Afterword 2020 Taylor & Francis
Chapter 5 2018 Maritza Bode Bakker and Monique Nuijten. Originally published as Open Access.
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ISBN13: 978-0-367-35502-9
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Contents
Oscar Salemink, Susanne Bregnbk and Dan V. Hirslund
Dan V. Hirslund
Sara Lei Sparre
Susanne Bregnbk
Henrik Vigh
Maritza Bode Bakker and Monique Nuijten
Helene Risr and Ignacia Arteaga Prez
Bryan S. Turner
The following chapters were originally published in Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
Introduction
Introduction: youth, subjectivity and Utopia ethnographic perspectives from the Global South
Oscar Salemink, Susanne Bregnbk and Dan Vesalainen Hirslund
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 125139
Chapter 1
Utopias of youth: politics of class in Maoist post-revolutionary mobilisation
Dan V. Hirslund
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 140157
Chapter 2
Experimenting with alternative futures in Cairo: young Muslim volunteers between god and the nation
Sara Lei Sparre
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 158175
Chapter 3
In search of the heart of a heartless world: Chinese youth, house-church Christianity and the longing for foreign Utopias
Susanne Bregnbk
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 176191
Chapter 4
Displaced utopia: on marginalisation, migration and emplacement in Bissau
Henrik Vigh
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 192209
Chapter 5
When breaking you make your soul dance Utopian aspirations and subjective transformation in breakdance
Maritza Bode Bakker and Monique Nuijten
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 210227
Chapter 6
Disjunctive belongings and the utopia of intimacy: violence, love and friendship among poor urban youth in neoliberal Chile
Helene Risr and Ignacia Arteaga Prez
Identities, volume 25, issue 2 (April 2018) pp. 228244
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Ignacia Arteaga Prez is a Teaching Associate and Affiliated Lecturer in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, UK. Her research interests include anthropology of biomedicine, anthropology of care, multi-species ethnography, and the embodiment of social inequalities.
Maritza Bode Bakker is a finance specialist at TOPdesk, the Netherlands. She was a Research Assistant in the Department of Sociology of Development and Change at Wageningen University and Research Centre, the Netherlands. She is interested in the field of development, specifically on social inclusion. She is also interested in the role of youth and how they can use the arts (theatre, music, dance, art) for development.
Susanne Bregnbk is an anthropologist and Associate Professor at University College Copenhagen, Denmark. Her book