talks:payback
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talks:payback [2019/01/24 17:23] – [The payback beat: Ethnographic citizenship and the public kinship of indigenous subjects in postcolonial Papua New Guinea] Ryan Schram (admin) | talks:payback [2019/01/27 00:03] – [The love gift] Ryan Schram (admin) | ||
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University of Sydney | University of Sydney | ||
- | January | + | January |
A {{ : | A {{ : | ||
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### Abstract | ### Abstract | ||
- | Unlike many postcolonial nations, Papua New Guinea defines itself through ethnographic citizenship in which members of its population are united in the empirical fact that they have an origin in some kind of indigenous society, rather than a common cultural tradition. | + | Unlike many postcolonial nations, Papua New Guinea defines itself through ethnographic citizenship in which members of its population are united in the empirical fact that they have an origin in some kind of indigenous society, rather than a common cultural tradition. |
===== The love gift ===== | ===== The love gift ===== | ||
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In response to a murder in Mount Hagen town in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG), the Western Highlands Peace Committee was formed to raise funds for a “love gift.” They claimed that it was based on Highlands tradition, but stressed that it was not compensation. | In response to a murder in Mount Hagen town in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG), the Western Highlands Peace Committee was formed to raise funds for a “love gift.” They claimed that it was based on Highlands tradition, but stressed that it was not compensation. | ||
- | {{talks: | + | {{ :talks: |
===== Ethnographic citizenship in PNG ===== | ===== Ethnographic citizenship in PNG ===== |
talks/payback.txt · Last modified: 2021/06/29 02:27 by 127.0.0.1