Abstract
The collection of essays in “The Village Global: Emergent Anthropologies of Rural Sociality” explores contemporary ethnographic articulations of the rural and the urban, understood as a continuum irreducible to the polarity of one or the other term. Considered together, this special issue offers a theoretical intervention in taking the rural seriously as more than just what is “left behind” by modernity. Collectively, our anthropological concern is not only with the (perceived, lived, or imagined) contrasts between what is characterized as “rural” in opposition to “urban” but with the constitution of the categories themselves as experienced realities.
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