HAU

HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory

HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, is an international peer-reviewed, partly open-access journal that appears in both digital and print format. It aims to take ethnography as the prime heuristic of anthropology, and return it to the forefront of conceptual developments in the discipline.

The journal is motivated by the desire to reinstate ethnographic theorization in contemporary anthropology as an alternative to explanation or contextualization by philosophical arguments--moves which have resulted in a loss of the discipline's distinctive theoretical nerve. By drawing out anthropology’s potential to critically engage and challenge its own cosmological assumptions and concepts, HAU aims to provide an exciting new arena for evaluating ethnography as a daring enterprise for worlding alien terms and forms of life, exploring  their potential for rethinking humanity, self, and alterity.

HAU takes its name from a Māori concept, whose controversial translations—and the equivocations to which they gave rise—have generated productive theoretical work in anthropology, reminding us that our discipline exists in tension with the incomparable and the untranslatable. Through their reversibility, such inferential misunderstandings invite us to explore how encounters with alterity can render intelligible a range of diverse knowledge practices. In its online version, HAU stresses immediacy of publication, allowing for the timely publication and distribution of untimely ideas. The journal aims to attract the most daring thinkers in the discipline, regardless of position or background.

HAU welcomes submissions that strengthen ethnographic engagement with received knowledges, revive the vibrant themes of anthropology through debate and engagement with other disciplines, and explore domains held until recently to be the province of economics, philosophy, and the sciences. Topics addressed by the journal include, among others, diverse ontologies and epistemologies, forms of human engagement and relationality, cosmology and myth, magic, witchcraft and sorcery, truth and falsehood, science and anti-science, art and aesthetics, theories of kinship and relatedness with humans and non-humans, power, hierarchy, materiality, perception, environment and space, time and temporality, personhood and subjectivity, and the metaphysics of morality and ethics.

Free access journal
The University of Chicago Press publishes one free-access journal: HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. This model provides one month of free access after the release of each new issue, and then requires a subscription for continuous access to content. All HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory content published from 2011-2017 is open access.

Announcements

 

January 2025 Call for editors HAU Books Editorial Collective

 

The Board of Directors of the Society for Ethnographic Theory is calling for applications or nominations to join the editorial collective of HAU Books. With five interrelated book series, HAU Books is committed to publishing distinguished texts in classics and advanced anthropological theory. Most titles are released digitally as Open Access and as paperback editions, printed and distributed by the University of Chicago Press.

 
Posted: 2024-12-06 More...
 
More Announcements...

Vol 15, No 1 (2025)

Cover Page

Table of Contents

Editorial Note

Creativity, courage, and care
Raminder Kaur, Adeline Masquelier, Louisa Lombard, Luiz Costa
1–7

Lecture

Successful aging’s global moment: Visions and dilemmas of aging well
Sarah Lamb
8–25

Articles

G. Ali Shair
26–44
P. C. Saidalavi
45–58
Lena Schwiete
59–73
Viola Thimm
74–86
Johannes Felix Lenhard
87–100
Carlos Chirinos
101–114
Lara J. Mertens
115–128
Dace Dzenovska, Dominic Martin, Volodymyr Artiukh
129–145
Amir Reicher
146–160

Translation

Dorothy L. Zinn
161–163
Ernesto de Martino
164–179

Book Symposium

Introduction
Sruti Chaganti
180–181
“I planted blind hope in their hearts”
Roger Berkowitz
182–185
Criminalization on trial
Naor Ben-Yehoyada
186–188
Until the war on terror is abolished …
Serra Hakyemez
189–192
Law as a vocation
Bhrigupati Singh
193–196
Binding claims
Sruti Chaganti
197–199
Thinking about the law and hope, in dark times
Mayur Suresh
200–203

Book Symposium

Queering belonging in death?
Anne Allison
204–206
Queer subjects of intimate exclusion
Tom Boellstorff
207–210
Politics of matter and politics of ontology
Moisés Lino E Silva
211–214
Destabilizing homophobia: Kenya, the world, and now
Martin Manalansan
215–218
Politics of matter and politics of ontology
Mwenda Ntarangwi
219–221
The bait of falsehood, the carp of truth
Vaibhav Saria
222–225
Objects, intimacy, citizenship: A response
George Paul Meiu
226–231