Books
I’m a cultural anthropologist. My studies during the last twenty+ years of the 20th century focused on visible and audible aspects of culture, especially those embedded in contested narrative and institutional frames. I study arts and crafts in global art markets, museum narratives about the "primitive" and the "indigenous," the use of ethnic designs to brand and signify authenticity, the construction of spaces and places to tell stories, and such-like.
I laid out those issues as I saw them in The Death of Authentic Primitive Art and Other Tales of Progress (U.C. Press 1998). The argument I made about those arts in the twentieth century is valid, I believe, but we are no longer in the twentieth century, and the valences of all the elements have shifted, dissolved, and transformed.
My last major academic writing on non-Western arts appeared in the Routledge Companion to Contemporary Anthropology (Routledge, 2016). It's called "Entangled Subjects and Art Objects." Read it here.
Prior to focusing on the arts, I focused on politics, gender, and meaningful cultural aesthetic forms. I did year+-long fieldwork in the Duke of York Islands in Papua-New Guinea in 1968, and 18 months of fieldwork in South Sulawesi, Indonesia in the mid-70s. The two books about Indonesian matters are Meaning and Power in a Southeast Asia Realm (Princeton U Press, 1989), and Power and Difference, ed. Jane Atkinson and Shelly Errington (Stanford U. Press 1990).
In the 21st century, intending to continue the conversation about museology and the arts of marginalized peoples, I went to Mexico. It took me in other directions, and I made a film about artisanal processes in the Purépecha-speaking communities and towns of Michoacan.
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Meaning and Power in a Southeast Asian Realm
Shelly Errington explores the politics of constituting and maintaining such centered socio-political spaces in a former Indic State called Luwu, which lies in South Sulawesi (Celebes), Indonesia.
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Power and Difference: Gender in Island Southeast Asia
Although the societies of island Southeast Asia(Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines, plus Brunei and Singapore) are known for their egalitarian relations between men and women, subtle differences in power and status do exist.
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The Death of Authentic Primitive Art
In this lucid, witty, and forceful book, Shelly Errington argues that Primitive Art was invented as a new type of art object at the beginning of the twentieth century but that now, at the century's end, it has died a double but contradictory death.