Research ethics committees, ethnographers and imaginations of risk
Research ethics committees, ethnographers and imaginations of risk Ethnography, Ahead of Print. Ethnographers’ concerns about institutional ethics review are by now well-known and several hypotheses have been advanced to explain…
Kinship nomenclatures and kin marriage
Kinship nomenclatures and kin marriage Go to Source
How exceptional are the Lòlop’ò?
How exceptional are the Lòlop’ò? Go to Source
Ritual as theory, theory as ritual
Ritual as theory, theory as ritual Go to Source
The rights of the dead
The rights of the dead Go to Source
Corpses and voices across worlds
Corpses and voices across worlds Go to Source
Introduction to “Kinship nomenclatures and kin marriage” by Paul Kirchhoff
Introduction to “Kinship nomenclatures and kin marriage” by Paul Kirchhoff Go to Source
Practices of Ethnographic Research: Introduction to the Special Issue
Practices of Ethnographic Research: Introduction to the Special Issue Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Volume 50, Issue 1, Page 3-10, February 2021. Go to Source
Ethical citizenship and global development: Exploring the intersections
Ethical citizenship and global development: Exploring the intersections Departing from Aihwa Ong’s influential analysis of citizenship as a Foucauldian cultural project of subject-making, this contribution examines three global development citizen-subjects:…
The future is family
The future is family Future visions energize growing enterprises, states, and families to act. Together, these entwined processes and their conflicts open unpredictable avenues for both profit-making and social transformation.…
Singing a cosmos into being—for silent or argumentative ancestors?
Singing a cosmos into being—for silent or argumentative ancestors? Go to Source
Death rites as existential inquiry
Death rites as existential inquiry Go to Source
Ritual action, context and comparison
Ritual action, context and comparison Go to Source
Against invisibilization—towards “Blackness” as a universal claim
Against invisibilization—towards “Blackness” as a universal claim From post-World War II Germany to contemporary contexts beyond Europe and the United States, this contribution considers the extent to which “Blackness” has…
Asia as strategy: Deployments of a Chinese planet
Asia as strategy: Deployments of a Chinese planet This contribution reflects on Aihwa Ong’s thoughts on the global and her later work with Asian scientists to look at recent Chinese…
Making MSM: Biopolitical subjects in Vietnam
Making MSM: Biopolitical subjects in Vietnam This contribution explores the discursive and practical marking of gay males as targets of a biopolitical regime whose aim, ostensibly, was and is to…
Sustainability enclaves in Southeast Asia
Sustainability enclaves in Southeast Asia Resource regimes in postsocialist Laos have been dominated by foreign actors in ways that frequently dovetail with the prerogatives of multilateral investment and the work…
Making things fungible
Making things fungible This essay draws on Aihwa Ong’s conception of “fungible life,” applying it to the practice of stockpiling essential goods. It argues that stockpiling is not just a…
Towards a “contrapuntal” anthropology of the global
Towards a “contrapuntal” anthropology of the global This essay explores the paradox of how Aihwa Ong’s classic work on Chineseness managed to remain in but not of China. Identifying the…
Global anthropology and the art of the middle range
Global anthropology and the art of the middle range Over the past forty years, Aihwa Ong has invented a remarkable collection of powerful concepts, delivered in compact and vivid terms,…