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Anthropology Faculty
Donald Moore
Social Cultural Anthropology
331 Kroeber Hall
510.642.8357
dsmoore@berkeley.edu
Office Hours: W 12-3 or as posted
Research Interests
My work focuses on power, spatiality, and race. I have conducted over
30 months of ethnographic fieldwork on agrarian micro-politics in Eastern
Zimbabwe. This work explores the cultural politics of landscape and
identity, focusing on both colonial and postcolonial governmentality,
those assemblages of practice that promote self-disciplining subjects.
I use both historical and ethnographic prisms to examine racialized
regimes of rule in southern Africa, notably conflicts over land, labor,
and livelihood. This ethnographic work on situated struggles tries to bring a more enlivened spatial sensitivity to contemporary
anthropological formulations of the cultural politics of place, power,
and identity. A brief period of field research in South Africa focused
on post-apartheid land claims and the cultural politics of recognition
and redistribution.
More recent work maps an emergent field of the cultural politics of
race and nature. How do race and nature work as contested terrains of
power? Drawing from Race Critical Theory, postcolonial theory, and the
field of environmental politics, this project tracks the traffic between
nature and culture that routes through historically specific formations
of racism. Part of this work resulted in a collaborative project that
produced the co-edited Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference (Duke, 2003).
On campus, I am one of the core faculty members in the interdisciplinary
Environmental Politics initiative, housed within the Institute of International
Studies. I remain actively involved in African Studies; in the African
Diaspora Program (within African-American Studies); and with the Graduate
Group in Women, Gender, and Sexuality. Inside the department, my research
and teaching interests include: governmentality; cultural politics;
spatiality and power; environment and development; race and the politics
of difference; and postcolonial theory. I am currently on the editorial
boards of Cultural Anthropology and Society and Space,
a journal of Critical Human Geography.
Representative Publications
2003. Race, Nature, and the Politics of Difference. Edited by Donald
S. Moore, Jake Kosek, and Anand Pandian. Durham: Duke University Press.
2003. Beyond Blackmail: Multivalent Modernities and the Cultural Politics
of Development in India. In Regional Modernities: The Cultural
Politics of Development in India. K. Sivaramakrishnan and Arun Agrawal,
eds. Pp. 165-214. Delhi: Oxford University Press.
1999. The Crucible of Cultural Politics: Reworking Development in Zimbabwe's
Eastern Highlands. American Ethnologist 26(3):654-89.
1998. Clear Waters and Muddied Histories: Environmental History and
the Politics of Community in Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands. Journal of
Southern African Studies 24(2):377-404.
1998. Subaltern Struggles and the Politics of Place: Remapping Resistance
in Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands. Cultural Anthropology 13(3):344-81.
1996. Marxism, Culture, and Political Ecology: Environmental Struggles
in Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands. In Liberation Ecologies: Environment,
Development, Social Movements. R. Peet and M. Watts, eds. Pp. 125-47.
London: Routledge.
1994. Optics of Engagement: Power, Positionality, and African Studies.
Transition 64: 121-127.
1993. Contesting Terrain in Zimbabwe's Eastern Highlands: Political
Ecology, Ethnography, and Peasant Resource Struggles. Economic Geography
69(4): 380-401.
Courses
for Fall 2007
Anthropology
148: Anthropology of the Environment
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- Anthropology 250X-9: Space, Place and Power
Syllabi
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