Útdráttur
This article reflects on the conceptual debt that anthropology has developed towards the peoples it studies, by exploring the case-study of Gypsy/Roma anthropology. We argue that ethnographically-grounded research has enabled anthropologists to access and incorporate Gypsy/Roma visions and practices of the world. The flexible Gypsy epistemologies, which Gypsies/ Roma use in the social and cultural construction of particular forms of identity and mobility, have thus translated into a specific practice of theory, which has provided more adequate tools for grasping the complexity of reality and contributed to a decolonialisation of anthropological thought.
| Upprunalegt tungumál | Enska |
|---|---|
| Síður (frá-til) | 228-240 |
| Síðufjöldi | 13 |
| Fræðitímarit | Nomadic Peoples |
| Bindi | 24 |
| Númer tölublaðs | 2 |
| DOI | |
| Útgáfustaða | Útgefið - okt. 2020 |
Athugasemd
Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Commission for Nomadic Peoples.Fingerprint
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