Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Modernity, History, and Conflict in Divided Cyprus:
An Overview Yiannis Papadakis, Nicos Peristianis, and Gisela
Welz
1. Transforming Lives: Process and Person in Cypriot Modernity
Michael Herzfeld
2. On the Condition of Postcoloniality in Cyprus Rebecca Bryant
3. Disclosure and Censorship in Divided Cyprus: Toward an
Anthropology of Ethnic Autism Yiannis Papadakis
4. De-Ethnicizing the Ethnography of Cyprus: Political and Social
Conflict between Turkish Cypriots and Settlers from Turkey Yael
Navaro-Yashin
5. Cypriot Nationalism, Dual Identity, and Politics Nicos
Peristianis
6. Children Constructing Ethnic Identities in Cyprus Spyros
Spyrou
7. "Contested Natures": An Environmental Conflict in Cyprus Gisela
Welz
8. Gardens and the Nature of Rootedness in Cyprus Anne Jepson
9. Researching Society and Culture in Cyprus: Displacements,
Hybridities, and Dialogical Frameworks Floya Anthias
10. Recognition and Emotion: Exhumations of Missing Persons in
Cyprus Paul Sant Cassia
11. Postscript: Reflections on an Anthropology of Cyprus Vassos
Argyrou
List of Contributors
Index
Provides social, cultural, and historical context for understanding one of Europe's longest-running conflicts
Yiannis Papadakis is Assistant Professor of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Cyprus.
Nicos Peristianis is Executive Dean of Intercollege of Cyprus and President of the Cyprus Sociological Association.
Gisela Welz is Professor and Chair of Cultural Anthropology and European Ethnology, Goethe University Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
"Ushers the reader into the complexities of the categorical ambiguity of Cyprus [and] ... concentrates ... on the Dead Zone of the divided society, in the cultural space where those who refuse to go to the poles gather." --Anastasia Karakasidou, Wellesley College "Of the recent publications on the "Cyprus Problem", Divided Cyprus ranks amongst the best. It is scholarly, very well conceived, nicely structured, and expertly executed. Most importantly, it is thought provoking. I highly recommend it to any serious scholar of Cyprus' past and present, and to those interested in its future progress."--THE CYPRUS REVIEW (VOL. 18:2, FALL 2006)
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