Historical Introduction: The Blue Nile Borderlands
Part One: The Struggles for Kurmuk and for Chali
1: Projects, Targets, and the Recruitment of the People
2: Chali: Rooting up a Sleepy Village
3: Chali: Front-line Garrison
Part Two: The Long Road, 1987-93
4: Initial Refuge at Assosa and Why it Failed
5: Blue Nile South: Ethiopian Turmoil, SPLA-protection, 1990-92
6: The SPLA Split: Refugees on the Edge
7: Escape Bac to the New Ethiopia, 1992-3
Part Three: Beyond Words
8: Safe Haven? Bonga Refugee Scheme
9: Dance, Music, and Poetry
10: Sermons, Visions, and Dreams
11: Reunions, Retrospectives, and Ironies
Epilogue
Current and Future Agendas
Appendix: Time Chart
Wendy James is Professor Emeritus of Social Anthropology in the
University of Oxford, and a Fellow of St. Cross College. She has
carried out research in the Sudan and Ethiopia intermittently over
four decades, and has long-standing academic links with
universities and other institutions in the region of north-eastern
Africa. She is a Fellow of the British Academy and has served as
President of the Royal Anthropological Institute. She has published
widely not
only on Africa but on the history and current scope of
anthropology, as well as acting on various occasions as a
consultant to the UN and associated agencies. She was awarded an
honorary doctorate by the
University of Copenhagen in 2005.
Wendy James's book is an impressive study, based on long-term field
research in the turbulent area of Southeast Sudan bordering
Ethiopia and in Khartoum, and gives great insights into the
experiences of the Uduk (or Kwanim Pa) people and their wider
(inter)national contexts ... This monograph makes absorbing
reading; Wendy James has done a wonderful job.
*Jon Abbink, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute*
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