Lisa Stevenson 
Life Beside Itself [EPUB ebook] 
Imagining Care in the Canadian Arctic

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In Life Beside Itself, Lisa Stevenson takes us on a haunting ethnographic journey through two historical moments when life for the Canadian Inuit has hung in the balance: the tuberculosis epidemic (1940s to the early 1960s) and the subsequent suicide epidemic (1980s to the present). Along the way, Stevenson troubles our commonsense understanding of what life is and what it means to care for the life of another. Through close attention to the images in which we think and dream and through which we understand the world, Stevenson describes a world in which life is beside itself: the name-soul of a teenager who dies in a crash lives again in his friend’s newborn baby, a young girl shares a last smoke with a dead friend in a dream, and the possessed hands of a clock spin uncontrollably over its face. In these contexts, humanitarian policies make little sense because they attempt to save lives by merely keeping a body alive. For the Inuit, and perhaps for all of us, life is ‘somewhere else, ‘ and the task is to articulate forms of care for others that are adequate to that truth.

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Table of Content

Prologue: Between Two Women 
Acknowledgments 
Introduction 
1. Facts and Images 
2. Cooperating 
3. Anonymous Care 
4. Life-of-the-Name 
5. Why Two Clocks? 
6. Song 
Epilogue: Writing on Styrofoam 
Notes 
References 
List of Illustrations 
Index

About the author

Lisa Stevenson is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Mc Gill University and the editor of Critical Inuit Studies: An Anthology of Contemporary Arctic Ethnography (2006).

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Language English ● Format EPUB ● Pages 272 ● ISBN 9780520958555 ● File size 3.7 MB ● Publisher University of California Press ● Published 2014 ● Edition 1 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 5511926 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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