Dreams Gender and Artisanal Mining in Papua New Guinea
English

About The Book

Up to 200000 Melanesian men women and children work as artisanal miners yet their lifeworlds are seriously under-researched. This ethnography of a multigenerational community of migrant miners in Papua New Guinea shows that dreaming mediates how they experience and manage gold mining. Men argue that they alone can mine successfully by forming oneiric marriage bonds with the spirits of the land. Women draw on their own dream experience to challenge this asserting their equal capacity to marry spirits and their right to mine. For women and men alike dreams provide legitimations of agency and commentaries on mutual dependencies and moral obligations in the domestic domain and between humans and nonhumans.
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