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First published on February 29, 2008 Men and Masculinities 2008, doi:10.1177/1097184X08315099
The Things We Carry
Stanley Brandes*
University of California, Berkeley
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: brandes{at}berkeley.edu.
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Abstract |
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This article takes as its starting point Tim OBriens famous essay, "The Things They Carried," a fictional evocation of tangible and intangible items that Vietnam War soldiers hauled around with them in the field. "The Things We Carry," by contrast, analyzes the theoretical ideas and various components of social identity that anthropologists bring with them to the communities in which they carry out research. This article focuses especially on the authors status as a young married male conducting fieldwork in the part of southern Spain known as Andalusia. Access to field data did not depend in this case solely on the social structure and prevalent ideology of the community itself. Rather, the social and intellectual attributes of the author—that which he carried with him—proved crucial in guiding the research outcome.

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