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| Denis Monnerie
Professor Institut d'ethnologie + Laboratoire DynamE CNRS MISHA Strasbourg Université de Strasbourg (France) Website(s): [ http://ethnologie.unistra.fr/ ] I speak in the following language(s): French, English, German
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Specialities |
Kinship, Language, Ceremonial discourse, Names and Naming, Performance, Political Anthropology, Resilience, Ritual Studies, Social Change, Society, Bureaucratization, Christianisation, Conceptual Model, Epistemology, Gardens, Globalization, Institution, Language-Culture-Cognition, Mode of Actions, Narratives, Colonialism, Regional Integration, Senses, Social Organization, Verbal Art, Time, Exchanges, Horticulture, Theories Of Exchanges |
Discipline(s) |
Anthropology Epistemology
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Member of |
Société des Océanistes (SdO) e-toile Pacifique (e-toile) European Society for Oceanists (ESfO)  |
Geographic administrative areas |
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Historical periods |
First and Early contacts The Colonial time 20th century 21st century
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Indigenous languages |
Nyelâyu, Mono |
Download the CV |
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Experiences |
PhD Research (1982 to 1988) Nitu, les vivants, les morts et le cosmos selon la société de Mono-Alu (Iles Salomon) — EHESS Paris, Equipe ERASME (UPR 262 CNRS) Historical anthropology of Mono-Alu (1850-1909), its social systems : rituals, shell valuables, exchanges, kinship, totemism, social orders, cosmology, myths, language, etc. AND its regional relationsField Research (1992 to 2012 ...) Arama and Northern Hoot ma Whaap - Kanaky New Caledonia — Etudes des Sociétés Kanak (ESK), Equipe ERASME (CNRS), Projet SIDA CNRS, Laboratoire Cultures et Sociétés en Europe, ANR LocNatPol, etc. Long terme fieldwork (about 3 years), participant observation, in the local language : nyêlâyu. Systematically extended to regional relations, relations with the colonial system and globalization.Academic Position (2001 to 2017) Professor of 'ethnologie' — Université de Strasbourg Teaching, research, scientific pedagogy, administrative. |
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Some figures...The database of experts counts today 1083 profiles, of which 541 are publicly accessible, while 542 have chosen to remain private. These persons have defined 683 unique keywords in which they situate their research interests and expertise. They have also defined and described 593 ' experiences' (research and teaching activities, consulting work, or applied projects) in which they have contributed.
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