Être ethnologue au Yunnan

In China, a country marked by deep socioeconomic upheavals over the past three decades, an extremely diversified, captivating and complex field of study offers itself for analysis. Here I look at my own analytical development, in light of the changes I have been observing since 1998, linked to Yunna...

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Main Author: Aurélie Névot
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Laboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie Comparative 2023-06-01
Series:Ateliers d'Anthropologie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/17486
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author Aurélie Névot
author_facet Aurélie Névot
author_sort Aurélie Névot
collection DOAJ
description In China, a country marked by deep socioeconomic upheavals over the past three decades, an extremely diversified, captivating and complex field of study offers itself for analysis. Here I look at my own analytical development, in light of the changes I have been observing since 1998, linked to Yunnan province in particular. I begin by setting the scene of the main metamorphoses experienced by a local minority: the Sani branch of the Yi nationality, located in the Stone Forest. Then I discuss—implicitly at first, then more centrally—ethnographic practice and conceptualisation in anthropology. The ethnologist’s intellectual journey is based on relations established with their informants, relations that also undergo change, influenced by the fieldwork or mirroring it, and conditioning the ethnologist’s understanding of the thought logic at play in what they observe. Thus I examine the ethnographic relationship “in motion” as a condition of the possibility of anthropology, and the ambiguities that this kind of “connection” implies. I also reflect on the “meaning” that emerges from observation in light of social changes: its understanding and the decentring it imposes.
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spelling doaj-art-52ba0b70273e4e598cdf1db30de2596e2025-01-30T13:42:50ZfraLaboratoire d'Ethnologie et de Sociologie ComparativeAteliers d'Anthropologie2117-38692023-06-015310.4000/ateliers.17486Être ethnologue au YunnanAurélie NévotIn China, a country marked by deep socioeconomic upheavals over the past three decades, an extremely diversified, captivating and complex field of study offers itself for analysis. Here I look at my own analytical development, in light of the changes I have been observing since 1998, linked to Yunnan province in particular. I begin by setting the scene of the main metamorphoses experienced by a local minority: the Sani branch of the Yi nationality, located in the Stone Forest. Then I discuss—implicitly at first, then more centrally—ethnographic practice and conceptualisation in anthropology. The ethnologist’s intellectual journey is based on relations established with their informants, relations that also undergo change, influenced by the fieldwork or mirroring it, and conditioning the ethnologist’s understanding of the thought logic at play in what they observe. Thus I examine the ethnographic relationship “in motion” as a condition of the possibility of anthropology, and the ambiguities that this kind of “connection” implies. I also reflect on the “meaning” that emerges from observation in light of social changes: its understanding and the decentring it imposes.https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/17486shamanismsocial changeChinabimoYi-Sani
spellingShingle Aurélie Névot
Être ethnologue au Yunnan
Ateliers d'Anthropologie
shamanism
social change
China
bimo
Yi-Sani
title Être ethnologue au Yunnan
title_full Être ethnologue au Yunnan
title_fullStr Être ethnologue au Yunnan
title_full_unstemmed Être ethnologue au Yunnan
title_short Être ethnologue au Yunnan
title_sort etre ethnologue au yunnan
topic shamanism
social change
China
bimo
Yi-Sani
url https://journals.openedition.org/ateliers/17486
work_keys_str_mv AT aurelienevot etreethnologueauyunnan