The Corn Wolf

The Corn Wolf

by Michael Taussig (Author)

Synopsis

Collecting a decade of work from iconic anthropologist and writer Michael Taussig, The Corn Wolf pinpoints a moment of intellectual development for the master stylist, exemplifying the nervous system approach to writing and truth that has characterized his trajectory. Pressured by the permanent state of emergency that imbues our times, this approach marries storytelling with theory, thickening spiraling analysis with ethnography and putting the study of so-called primitive societies back on the anthropological agenda as a way of better understanding the sacred in everyday life. The leading figure of these projects is the corn wolf, whom Wittgenstein used in his fierce polemic on Frazer's Golden Bough. For just as the corn wolf slips through the magic of language in fields of danger and disaster, so we are emboldened to take on the widespread culture of academic-or what he deems agribusiness -writing, which strips ethnography from its capacity to surprise and connect with other worlds, whether peasant farmers in Colombia, Palestinians in Israel, protestors in Zuccotti Park, or eccentric yet fundamental aspects of our condition such as animism, humming, or the acceleration of time. A glance at the chapter titles-such as The Stories Things Tell or Iconoclasm Dictionary -along with his compelling drawings, testifies to the resonant sensibility of these works, which lope like the corn wolf through the boundaries of writing and understanding.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 210
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 30 Nov 2015

ISBN 10: 022631085X
ISBN 13: 9780226310855

Media Reviews
Anothergreat volume by Taussig, which we have cometo expectalmost annually as his late career unfoldswith vitality, ingenuity, and surprises with the storytelling voice, finally, of a Marlowe. The idea of the nervous system proposed decades ago has served himwell as the frame in which old stories can be filled in, newonescan be told, and the intensesocial movements of protest today can be witnessed though a fertile imagination by which readers are comforted (yes, this is a Taussig story), aroused, andoutraged. --George Marcus, author of Ethnography through Thick and Thin
Another great volume by Taussig, which we have come to expect almost annually as his late career unfolds with vitality, ingenuity, and surprises--with the storytelling voice, finally, of a Marlowe. The idea of the 'nervous system' proposed decades ago has served him well as the frame in which old stories can be filled in, new ones can be told, and the intense social movements of protest today can be witnessed though a fertile imagination by which readers are comforted (yes, this is a Taussig story), aroused, and outraged. --George Marcus, author of Ethnography through Thick and Thin
Author Bio
Michael Taussig is the Class of 1993 Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University. He is the author of many books, most recently Beauty and the Beast and I Swear I Saw This, both also published by the University of Chicago Press.