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Social and Ritual Activity In and Out of Place: the 'Negotiation of Locality' in a Sudanese Refugee Settlement

Kaiser, Tania

Authors



Abstract

This article argues that peoples’ affective relationships with the specific physical territories that they inhabit are informed by and constructive of the social relations and practices which are enacted in them. When people are forced to leave their homes, the ways in which they
engage with their physical, socio-cultural, political and spiritual landscapes are necessarily transformed. Based on ethnographic research with a group of long term Sudanese refugees in Uganda, the article shows how challenges to socio-cultural, ritual and political identities and
activities are just as great as the more tangible challenges to protection and subsistence for
refugees.
The article examines a number of key socio-cultural activities including funeral rituals and agricultural practices, exploring the extent and ways in which ‘place making’ in exile involves the active mediation of external factors at a several levels as well as processes of compromise and substitution with respect both to material culture unavailable in the settlement, and also with in
relation to social relations and practice.

Citation

Kaiser, T. (2008). Social and Ritual Activity In and Out of Place: the 'Negotiation of Locality' in a Sudanese Refugee Settlement. https://doi.org/10.1080/17450100802376670

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2008
Deposit Date Mar 21, 2012
Journal Mobilities. Special Issue: 'Migrant Worlds, Material Cultures'
Print ISSN 17450101
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 3
Issue 3
Pages 375-395
DOI https://doi.org/10.1080/17450100802376670