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Bad habits and prosthetic performances : negotiation of individuality and embodiment of social status in Australian shark fishing

journal contribution
posted on 2007-01-01, 00:00 authored by Tanya KingTanya King
Anthropological discussion of individuality, as a component of masculinity, has tended to focus on either the performance and championing of autonomy in the West (e.g., Kapferer) or the manner in which people in non-Western contexts become explicitly manifest through relationships with others (e.g., Strathern). In this paper, I consider an atypical example of masculine identity by describing intimate interpersonal relationships between Australian commercial shark boat skippers and their young deckhands. As in other Western fisheries (e.g., Icelandic), economic success and physical safety are promoted through synergism among fishers. In the Australian case, however, the degree of corporeal cooperation is so extreme that deckhands resemble living prostheses of their skipper, embodying their peripheral socio-productive status. I consider this bond in the context of the Australian ethos of masculinity, in which displays of "individuality" are key. However, for young deckhands, their prosthetic role can compromise their passage into manhood.

History

Journal

Journal of anthropological research

Volume

63

Issue

4

Pagination

537 - 560

Publisher

University of New Mexico, Department of Anthropology

Location

Albuquerque, N.M.

ISSN

0091-7710

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2007, The University of New Mexico