Lexington Books
Pages: 266
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7391-4062-8 • Hardback • June 2010 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
Elizabeth C. Parsons is lecturer and co-director of contextual education at Boston University School of Theology.
Chapter 1 Prologue: The Miner's World of Work
Chapter 2 Chapter One: Stories We Tell Ourselves
Chapter 3 Chapter Two: Research Methods
Chapter 4 Chapter Three: Public Stories of Zambia's Mining History
Chapter 5 Chapter Four: Private Stories of Zambia's Mining History
Chapter 6 Chapter Five: "The Spirits are Not Happy:" How Zambians Knew Things Were Not Well
Chapter 7 Chapter Six: "Jealousy is There:" Accounting for Disparity, Ensuring Success
Chapter 8 Chapter Seven: "We are not Slaves:" The Pain and Power of Zambian Identity
Chapter 9 Chapter Eight: "They are Always Suspecting Us:" Expatriate Experiences of the Copperbelt
Chapter 10 Chapter Nine: Conclusion
It takes a patient listener to write these stories on how local people experience development beyond its material properties. Beautifully written, Parsons' book will surely help development planners to reflect on the cultural dimensions of their work.
— Dorothea Hilhorst, Wageningen University
This book tells a compelling story of an encounter, or rather a missed encounter, between two cosmologies: that of Western views of development and progress and of the Zambians and their understanding and sense of the world in which they live. The author's detailed fieldwork provides overwhelming evidence that 'development' can only start with acknowledging one's own worldviews and that of others. Development is not making the other in one's own image. I hope that the development establishment will listen.
— Séverine Deneulin, author of Religion in Development: Rewriting the Secular Script