Titelaufnahme

Titel
Sentimental textures of personhood among Indian Muslim family businesses in Malaysia / Waseem Naser
VerfasserNaser, Waseem
KörperschaftMax-Planck-Institut für Ethnologische Forschung
ErschienenHalle/Saale : Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, 2022
Umfang1 Online-Ressource (27 Seiten, 0,45 MB)
Anmerkung
Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 25-27
SpracheEnglisch
SerieWorking papers ; no. 211
URNurn:nbn:de:gbv:3:2-970361 
Zugriffsbeschränkung
 Das Dokument ist frei verfügbar
Dateien
Sentimental textures of personhood among Indian Muslim family businesses in Malaysia [0.45 mb]
Links
Nachweis
Klassifikation
Keywords
This paper presents ethnographic research conducted among Indian Muslim family businesses in Malaysia from October 2019 to September 2020. Their business practices depended on an intimate connection between the economic and domestic sustained through the inculcation of particular sentiments. Yet my interactions with them were frequently punctuated with expressions of ambivalence regarding these practices and sentiments. Some interlocutors saw their traditions and cultural practices as sustaining their businesses; for others it is rather that their businesses provide an avenue for sustaining their traditions in Malaysia. This ambivalence was particularly pronounced among the younger generation who grappled with the choice of whether to continue within their family businesses or seek their livelihood elsewhere. By focusing upon sentiments attached to the family that incite motivation and productivity in the business the article explores these business practices as a means of grasping forms of personhood among them. The conceptual focus on personhood is brought into conversation with the burgeoning literature on the anthropology of emotions. Specifically the paper proposes that emotions can be conceived as a ‘technique’ of the body/person; it illustrates this through an ethnography of communities that privilege emotions as an aspect of social relations and embodied existence.