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Allen Abramson

Allen Abramson

Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 8640

Fax: +44 (0)20 7679 8632

Email : a.abramson@ucl.ac.uk

Room: 143

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GENERAL INTERESTS

  • The ethnography of extreme performanceÌý(e.g. risk, value, epic)ÌýÌý
  • Anthropologies of land (e.g. nature, landscape and law)
  • Oceania (especially Western Polynesia and Fiji)
  • Culture, contradiction and transformation
  • Ethnography of the changing modern university

Consultancy is an integral part of Allen's commitment to public engagement. For inquiries into how UCL’s anthropology department can support your organization, please consult theÌýEthnographic InsightsÌýLab.

RESEARCH

To date, allÌýof my research has aimedÌýatÌýelucidatingÌýthe logical tendenciesÌýand dialectical propertiesÌýof transforming cultural worlds.ÌýThis basic allegience has underpinnedÌýstudies of myth, ritual and gender (especially in the Oceanic context) as well as a strongÌýinterest in relations connecting land, death and value.ÌýCurrently, I am extending this concern toÌýexplore landscapes of risk and extreme transformations of culture.Ìý

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A. FIJI/WESTERN POLYNESIA/OCEANIAÌý My doctoral thesis was entitled Structure andÌýContradiction in the Life-World of an Interior Fijian Chiefdom. ThisÌýwork gave initially gave rise to studies in the cultural transformationÌýof sexuality, genderÌýand mana in the region, testing (for Eastern Fiji) the validity of Freeman's critique of Margaret Mead's Samoan work on the social relations of adolescent sexuality. In this context, IÌýalso explored on the basis of my own fieldwork experience, the value of autobiographical expositions in ethnography.ÌýÌý

Most recent research focuses upon relations betweenÌýembedded logicÌýand invented tradition in Fiji (Western Polynesia) with particular reference to matters of land, law and ritual.ÌýFour case-studies have resulted from this focus, each study dealing with theÌýsuperimposition of ancestral land rites and invented land rights in differing parts of the country. StudyÌýOne looked at the transition from ritualised pig-rearing to economic dairy farming in a large village chiefdom in the Fijian interior. StudyÌýTwo investigated the growth of sorcery following theÌýjural delineationÌýand bounding of ancestral land, hitherto unbounded. Study Three explored the mass direct action by clansmen (expressed in neo-traditional ritual forms) to the non-payment of landÌýrent. Study Four contrasted the invention of yaqona/kava ritual in the tourist sector with its embedded symbolic transformation in the contexts of sorcery, healing and chiefly practice.

This work was generalised in a collection co-edited with D. Theodossopoulos called Land, Law and Value: Mythical Lands, Legal BoundariesÌý(Pluto Press 2000)Ìýfor which I wrote a long theoretical introduction on the difference between landÌýmythically and jurally conceived and on the possible articulations of these two type of land relation.

Future research projects that I should like to conduct and/or supervise in this regionÌýmight involve focii on both urban and rural transformations of personhood (especially in relation to newÌýreligious developments);Ìýstrategies for the conservation/consolidation of private property (in the context of encroaching kinship relations); adventure and eco-tourism in the islands and interior(s); the social organisation and meaningÌýof sport (especially rugby) in Tonga, Samoa and Fiji.ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý

Theses supervised or co-supervised in this area include:

Chloe ColchesterÌý "Barkcloth in Fiji, S.W. Pacific: History, Culture and Politics" (2000)

S. KellyÌý "Mats in Vanua a'atu, Melanesia" (2000)

Anna Lisa RunarsdottirÌý "Cultural structures of the house in Tonga, S.W. Pacific" (2002)

Y. Ota "Custom and fishing: cultural meanings of fishing, Palau, Micronesia" (2006)

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B. LANDSCAPES OF RISK AND THE EXTREME TRANSFORMATION OF CULTUREÌý Most recently, this cultural interest in land, death and value has turned, historically and ethnographically, to the study of landscapes of risk. In this work, the focus is upon value-production in the context of different forms ofÌýextreme engagement with particular features of these landscapes.

The emphasis forÌýMelanesia isÌýritual: teasing out the ontological and transformative properties of the land-dive (gol) in Vanuatu and kula journeying in the Trobriand Islands. In the mid-modern Imperial West, the study turns to the performative impact of mountaineering, polar exploration and space-travel upon the cosmologyÌýof total sovereignty. In later modernity, the focus is upon the deep-playÌýof rock-climbing (where the symbolics of sovereignty turn inwards from Empire to the individual body) whilst, in post-progressive modern contexts, the focus is upon the gravitation of extreme engagement specifically to the spheres of (a) exotic sport (eg cliff-jumping; bungee jumping; free-running/parcours) and (b)Ìýmainstream institutions such as charity (jumps, runs and dives) and management training outdoorsÌý(which simulate extreme situations to aid the acquisition ofÌý'key skills' and 'personal development').

This research examines the growing extent to which sub-cultures and mainstream institutions (such as outdoor training courses and charity epics) metaphorically mine the extreme as part of a generalised contemporary re-grounding/re-landscaping of all social relations.(ie. heroism, epic and adventure;Ìýdangerous games and voluntary risk-taking; individual, collectiveÌýand imperial ventures).Ìý

I am carrying out a brief ethnography of an outdoor training course in a British university.

This is the first step in a comparative study of outdoor training courses in different social sectors (eg higher education; commerce; probation) for which i am applying for research funding.

In this area, I am currently first supervisor to:

Samantha Hurn (Expected 2004)
Andrea Carocci "Amateur aviation in Italy" (Expected 2006)
Sergio Gonzales

I am currently second supervisor to:
Paul Twinn "Carib ethnicity in St.Vincent" (2001/2)