Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia

This article asks how Nyangatom pastoralists currently make sense of the past, present and future of their pastoralist livelihood. Nyangatom pastoralists, like all agro-pastoralist groups in southern Ethiopia, are faced with enormous structural changes in their immediate surroundings, primarily due...

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Main Author: Jill Philine Blau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Land
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/7/2/54
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spelling doaj-8a277c35e7a94a89b3e99bd7c0913b672020-11-24T20:45:48ZengMDPI AGLand2073-445X2018-04-01725410.3390/land7020054land7020054Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, EthiopiaJill Philine Blau0School of Social Sciences (Development Studies), Friedensau Adventist University, An der Ihle 19, 39291 Möckern, GermanyThis article asks how Nyangatom pastoralists currently make sense of the past, present and future of their pastoralist livelihood. Nyangatom pastoralists, like all agro-pastoralist groups in southern Ethiopia, are faced with enormous structural changes in their immediate surroundings, primarily due to large-scale industrial agriculture and a government policy encouraging them to be sedentary. While the impacts have been discussed elsewhere, thus far little focus has been placed on what images of the past, present and future these changes create among the Nyangatom. This article pays attention to these changes by highlighting the results of a larger qualitative study. It becomes evident that discourses of modernity and culture are translated into the everyday lives of Nyangatom herders. While the past is constructed as a cultural/traditional time by the older generation, an image of modernity shapes the present life of younger generations. The administration plays a contradictory role in transmitting modernity ideals. The future of the Nyangatom is envisioned as a modern pastoralism, yet there is general pessimism with regards to pastoralism persisting.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/7/2/54pastoralismEthiopiaSouth OmoNyangatom
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jill Philine Blau
spellingShingle Jill Philine Blau
Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
Land
pastoralism
Ethiopia
South Omo
Nyangatom
author_facet Jill Philine Blau
author_sort Jill Philine Blau
title Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
title_short Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
title_full Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
title_fullStr Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Making Sense of Past, Present and Future. Images of Modern and Past Pastoralism among Nyangatom Herders in South Omo, Ethiopia
title_sort making sense of past, present and future. images of modern and past pastoralism among nyangatom herders in south omo, ethiopia
publisher MDPI AG
series Land
issn 2073-445X
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This article asks how Nyangatom pastoralists currently make sense of the past, present and future of their pastoralist livelihood. Nyangatom pastoralists, like all agro-pastoralist groups in southern Ethiopia, are faced with enormous structural changes in their immediate surroundings, primarily due to large-scale industrial agriculture and a government policy encouraging them to be sedentary. While the impacts have been discussed elsewhere, thus far little focus has been placed on what images of the past, present and future these changes create among the Nyangatom. This article pays attention to these changes by highlighting the results of a larger qualitative study. It becomes evident that discourses of modernity and culture are translated into the everyday lives of Nyangatom herders. While the past is constructed as a cultural/traditional time by the older generation, an image of modernity shapes the present life of younger generations. The administration plays a contradictory role in transmitting modernity ideals. The future of the Nyangatom is envisioned as a modern pastoralism, yet there is general pessimism with regards to pastoralism persisting.
topic pastoralism
Ethiopia
South Omo
Nyangatom
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/7/2/54
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