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Globalization promised to bring about a golden age of liberal individualism, breaking down hierarchies of kinship, caste, and gender around the world and freeing people to express their true, authentic agency. But in some places globalization has spurred the emergence of new forms of hierarchy—or the reemergence of old forms—as people try to reconstitute an imagined past of stable moral order. This is evident from the Islamic revival in the Middle East to visions of the 1950s family among conservatives in the United States. Why does this happen and how do we make sense of this phenomenon? Why do some communities see hierarchy as desireable? In this book, leading anthropologists draw on insightful ethnographic case studies from around the world to address these trends. Together, they develop a theory of hierarchy that treats it both as a relational form and a framework for organizing ideas about the social good.
Globalization promised to bring about a golden age of liberal individualism, breaking down hierarchies of kinship, caste, and gender around the world and freeing people to express their true, authentic agency. But in some places globalization has spurred the emergence of new forms of hierarchy—or the reemergence of old forms—as people try to reconstitute an imagined past of stable moral order. This is evident from the Islamic revival in the Middle East to visions of the 1950s family among conservatives in the United States. Why does this happen and how do we make sense of this phenomenon? Why do some communities see hierarchy as desireable? In this book, leading anthropologists draw on insightful ethnographic case studies from around the world to address these trends. Together, they develop a theory of hierarchy that treats it both as a relational form and a framework for organizing ideas about the social good.
Introduction: Hierarchy and Value
Naomi Haynes and Jason Hickel
Chapter 1. Battle of Cosmologies: The Catholic
Church, Adat, and ‘Inculturation’ among Northern Lio, Indonesia
Signe Howell
Chapter 2. Vertical Love: Forms of Submission
and Top-Down Power in Orthodox Ethiopia
Diego Maria Malara and Tom Boylston
Chapter 3. The Good, the Bad, and the Dead: The
Place of Destruction in the Organization of Social Life, Which
Means Hierarchy
Frederick H. Damon
Chapter 4. Civilization, Hierarchy, and
Political-Economic Inequality
Stephan Feuchtwang
Chapter 5. Islam and Pious Sociality: The
Ethics of Hierarchy in the Tablighi Jamaat in Pakistan
Arsalan Khan
Chapter 6. Demotion as Value: Rank Infraction
among the Ngadha in Flores, Indonesia
Olaf H. Smedal
Afterword: The Rise of Hierarchy
David Graeber
Jason Hickel is an anthropologist at Goldsmiths, University of London. His research spans several related themes, including political conflict, inequality, postdevelopment, and ecological economics. He is the author of Democracy as Death: The Moral Order of Anti-Liberal Politics in South Africa (University of California Press, 2015) and The Divide: A Brief Guide to Global Inequality and its Solutions (Penguin, 2017). He writes a column on political economy for The Guardian and Al Jazeera, sits on the executive board of Academics Stand Against Poverty, and serves as Policy Director for The Rules collective. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
“It is to the credit of the writers in this volume that they illuminate and question [some of the] things that Dumont linked to hierarchy. In doing so, they help make hierarchies problematic and linked to social processes and practices in ways that Dumont probably did not intend but that make the notion of hierarchy more useful as an analytical concept.” • Anthropos
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