J. Teresa Holmes
Associate Professor
Department of Anthropology
York University
United States of America
Biography
The central aim of this ongoing project is to examine how tourism serves as a foundation for the development of national identity and notions of citizenship. I have also conducted research in Kenya on issues of identity, representation, and power in colonial society. I am now completing a book based on this research entitled A House for the Kager: Contesting Relatedness in Colonial Kenya, which shows how forms of kinship, as constructed by British colonizers, were contested and re-negotiated by local populations as part of their response to colonial domination. My continued work in this area investigates the significance of local and state discourses of kinship in contemporary Kenyan society, exploring the possibility that public kinship continues to afford a meaningful source of identity for the framing of political action.
Research Interest
Anthropology , African Studies , Tourism in Belize, Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, Colonial culture in East Africa
Publications
-
2009 “When Blood Matters: Making Kinship in Colonial Kenya,†In Kinship and Beyond: The Genealogical Model Reconsidered. James Leach and Sandra Bamford (Eds), Oxford: Berghahn Books.
-
2010 "Tourism and the Making of Ethnic Citizenship in Belize," In Tourism, Power, and Culture: Anthropological Perspectives. Donald MacLeod and James G. Carrier (Eds). Clevedon UK: Channel View Publications.