Quandaries of Belonging: Notes on Home, from Abroad
By (Author) Michael Jackson
Anthem Press
First Hill Books
15th December 2020
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
304.8
Hardback
198
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 26mm
1g
Those who leave their homelands, either under duress or by design, will see them in a different light than those who have stayed put. Michael Jackson argues that the perspective of the expatriate may be compared with what ethnographers call stranger value. In moving between detachment and deep immersion, this bifocal perspective implicates a bicultural one, which is why Jackson has recourse to Mori traditional knowledge, not in order to impose a Eurocentric interpretation on them, but to show how cross-cultural conversations and interactions can promote new forms of sociality and coexistence.
It is said that inside each person is the universe. Jacksons book is a stunning illustration of this. Narrating the self and the places integral to his own making, he reaches out and grasps a shared humanity that strives to comprehend a poetics of fit in the world'. Amanda Kearney, Professor of Anthropology and Indigenous Studies at Flinders University and author of Violence in Place, Environmental and Cultural Wounding
The catchment of Michael Jacksons meditation upon home, identity and the mysterious elsewhere is widein terms of both place and timeyet his attention is always precise and finely tuned to patterns of thinking and living. Quandaries of Belonging is a paean to evolving consciousness and a rejection of the notion of firstness or the idea that foundations are necessarily more real than anything we built on them. He is a student of conversation, interaction and growth, of the life-as-lived, rendered with an often novelistic or poetic elan. Gregory OBrien, author of 'Always song in the water' (Auckland University Press, 2019)
In Quandaries of Belonging Michael Jackson brings an astute blend of anecdote, characterisation, history, philosophy and reminiscence to bear upon two great questions of our time: where is our home and how shall we know it Jacksons thought is elegant and persuasive; but never prescriptive. This is a book all New Zealanders, and everyone else too, should read. Martin Edmond author of 'Luca Antara' and 'The Expatriates'
Michael Jackson's experience of living abroad yet longing for home invites New Zealanders, not just expatriates, to consider the ways we are all at home in the world. Current tensions and bi-cultural issues within Aotearoa New Zealand are discussed with urgency, yet Jackson thinks globally and writes with poignant empathy. Jennifer Shennan, Author of 'The Mori Action Song - waiata--ringa, waiata kri - n whea tnei hua hou
Michael Jackson is the author of forty books of ethnography, memoir, fiction and poetry.