SHIPPING WORLDWIDE

Life Within Limits: Well-being in a World of Want - Paperback

Life Within Limits: Well-being in a World of Want - Paperback

9780822349150
Vendor
Books by splitShops
Regular price
$51.77
Sale price
$51.77
Unit price
per 
All duties and taxes calculated at checkout.

by Michael Jackson (Author)

The sense that well-being remains elusive, transitory, and unevenly distributed is felt by the rich as well as the poor, and in all societies. To explore this condition of existential dissatisfaction, the anthropologist Michael Jackson traveled to Sierra Leone, described in a recent UN report as the "least livable" country in the world. There he revisited the village where he did his first ethnographic fieldwork in 1969-70 and lived in 1979. Jackson writes that Africans have always faced forces from without that imperil their lives and livelihoods. Though these forces have assumed different forms at different times--slave raiding, warfare, epidemic illness, colonial domination, state interference, economic exploitation, and corrupt government--they are subject to the same mix of magical and practical reactions that affluent Westerners deploy against terrorist threats, illegal immigration, market collapse, and economic recession. Both the problem of well-being and the question of what makes life worthwhile are grounded in the mystery of existential discontent--the question as to why human beings, regardless of their external circumstances, are haunted by a sense of insufficiency and loss. While philosophers have often asked the most searching questions regarding the human condition, Jackson suggests that ethnographic method offers one of the most edifying ways of actually exploring those questions.

Author Biography

Michael Jackson, Distinguished Visiting Professor in World Religions at Harvard Divinity School, is an award-winning poet, novelist, and anthropologist. His many books include The Palm at the End of the Mind, Excursions, In Sierra Leone, and At Home in the World, all also published by Duke University Press.

Number of Pages: 248
Dimensions: 0.71 x 9.14 x 5.9 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: January 28, 2011