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Anthropology Faculty
Stefania
Pandolfo
Social Cultural Anthropology
303 Kroeber Hall
510.642.9229
pandolfo@berkeley.edu
Office Hours:M 11-2
Research Interests
The study of theories and forms of subjectivity, and their contemporary
predicaments in the Middle Eastern and Muslim world represent the main
focus of my current work. My writing, teaching and research cover the
following themes: narrative, trauma, psychoanalysis and the unconscious,
memory, historicity and the hermeneutics of disjuncture, language and
poetics, experimental ethnographic writing, anthropology and literature,
dreaming and the anthropological study of the imagination, intercultural
approaches to different ontologies and systems of knowledge, modernity,
colonialism and postcolonialism, madness and mental illness.
Area Interests
Morocco and the Maghreb, the Middle East, Maghribi migration to Europe,
Islam, Sufism
Previous Research
A study of memory, trauma, and the speech of loss in a Southern Moroccan
society, through spatial representation, autobiographical recollection,
historical narrative, and oral poetry. (Based on in depth ethnographic
study, including organization of space, agricultural practices, the
body and techniques, the transmission of knowledge, idioms of gender
and patriarchy) (See Impasse of the Angels. Scenes from a Moroccan Space
of Memory,Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1997).
Current Research
A study of emergent forms of subjectivity in Moroccan modernity at the
interface of "traditional therapies" and psychiatry/psychoanalysis,
exploring theoretical ways to think existence, possibility and creation
in a context of referential and institutional instability and in the
aftermath of trauma. Based on ethnographic research on spirit possession
and the "cures of the jinn", and on the experience of madness
in a psychiatric hospital setting. (Book in progress, Knots of the
Soul; see articles, Rapt de la Voix, in Awal, 15, 1997; Le Noeud
de l'Ame, in Rue Descartes.
Forthcoming
The Thin Line of Modernity in some Moroccan Debates on Subjectivity.
In Questions of Modernity, eds. T. Mitchell and L. Abu-Lughod.
The University of Minnesota
Press.
Courses
for Fall 2007.
Anthropology
149: Psychological Anthropology
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- Anthropology 250X-6: Violence, Death and Questions of Method
Syllabi
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