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Embedded in the land: Customary social relations and practices of resilience in an East Timorese community

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 11:11 authored by Victoria Stead
Drawing on a case study of Cacavei, a rural subsistence community in Timor-Leste, this article explores the mutually constitutive relationship between people and land within customary forms of society. Patterns of land use and connection to land are not simply reflective of genealogical modes of social organisation, but are also enabling of them. Particularly, the embedding of ancestors within the land offers a means of accessing kinship relationships beyond the genealogical present. Embeddedness provides a quality of embodiment that makes ancestors active participants in social life. Constituted in the relational nexus of people and land, forms of social organisation in Cacavei have a mutability which goes some way to explaining the community's resilience in spite of forced displacement and cultural disruption during the period of Indonesian occupation. This mutability might be considered more broadly as a source of resilience for customary communities grappling with modernising processes of change.

History

Journal

The Australian Journal of Anthropology

Volume

23

Issue

2

Start page

229

End page

247

Total pages

19

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Asia

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Australian Anthropological Society

Former Identifier

2006034452

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-12-10

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