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Revolt of the Saints
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Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments  ix

Introduction: Being, through the Archive  1

1. "The Eighteenth Battalion of Love": Failure and the Dissemination of Misinterpretation  44

2. Letters to the Amazons  102

3. Prostitution's Bureaucracy: Making Up People in the "City of Women"  141

4. A Metaphysics for Our Time: Pelourinho Properties, Bahian Social Bodies, and the Shifting Meanings of Rams and Fetuses  181

5. Treasure Tales and National Bodies: Mystery and Metaphor in Bahian Life  215

6. "But Madame, What If I Should Need to Defecate in Your Neighborhood?"  266

7. "Chatty Chatty Mouth, You Want to Know Your Culture"  305

Conclusion: Saints, Not Angels  345

Appendix: Acronyms Used  363

Notes  365

References  411

Index  443

About the Author

John F. Collins is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Reviews

"The rich and multifaceted analysis Collins presents in this book is sure to be of interest to a wide range of readers. Its highly original and provocative analysis of heritage politics and memory, as well as racial politics in Brazil, makes it a must-read for scholars in these fields. In addition, the book has much to offer to a readership concerned with urban poverty and government efforts to address it, tourism, and the deep entanglements of social scientific scholarship with local politics of culture, race, history, and morality. Finally, the manner in which Collins translates sensitive ethnographic research and description into thought-provoking theoretical insight speaks directly to recent anthropological discussions on ethnographic theorization."
*Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology*

"...remarkably iconoclastic analysis of race, space, and history.... ethnography that invades the minds and stirs the guts of all those involved in its contents and consumption."
*AAG Review of Books*

"This is indeed a gringo who knows his Brazil; the analysis is laced with poetry, with the plots of classic novels, with smells, odd recollections, postcards, music, maps, numerous black-and-white photographs, and with emotion—including a millennial version of the sadness of the tropics..."
*Journal of Anthropological Research*

"There can be little doubt... that this important book will long remain a touchstone for future research on the perils of top-down management of a vulnerable community’s cultural heritage."
*International Journal of Cultural Property*

"[An] extraordinarily detailed and theoretically imaginative exploration of how elite and nonelite ideas of Afro-Bahian history and identity coincide, collide, and mutually refract in the decades both before and after the UNESCO declaration."
*American Ethnologist*

"[Revolt of the Saints] succeeds in disturbing conventional platitudes about race and history in the construction of a Brazilian national identity. It is theoretically subtle, methodologically extraordinary, and adds a healthy dose of cynicism to the vast and often starry-eyed ethnography of black people in Bahia."
*Anthropological Quarterly*

"Collins’s book is a Caribbean pepperpot stew, an ongoing accretion of ingredients simmered for long periods. It is mature, flavourful, surprising and rewarding. Its constant reflexive re-framings and maze-like progressions fascinate, and occasionally produce an Alice-through-the-looking-glass sense of (not unpleasurable) disorientation."
*Journal of Latin American Studies*

"With this book John F. Collins explores the possibilities of ethnography in a very elegant and sensorial way,
without neglecting to offer a novel and very well-illustrated approach to the contemporary politics of patrimony and how it ties with racial politics, turning race from quality into a historical and historicised property."
*Social Anthropology*

"[Collins's] retelling of the contemporary reconstruction of the Pelourinho is imaginative and unconventional. . . . Collins enriches our understanding of contemporary shifts in Bahian racial politics."
*H-LatAm, H-Net Reviews*

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