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Night, sight, and feeling safe: An exploration of aspects of W arlpiri and W estern sleep
Author(s) -
Musharbash Yasmine
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the australian journal of anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.245
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1757-6547
pISSN - 1035-8811
DOI - 10.1111/taja.12021
Subject(s) - ethnography , feeling , participant observation , sight , sleep (system call) , settlement (finance) , psychology , sociology , aesthetics , social psychology , anthropology , philosophy , computer science , physics , astronomy , world wide web , payment , operating system
Sleeping leaves those asleep ‘blind’ and hence oblivious to potential or real danger. Such dangers are heightened further and more feared at night, the main time for sleep. In this article, I link ideas about sleep and nighttime social practices with questions about vision. My aim is to tease out some of the meanings implied in cross‐culturally distinct solutions to the protection of sleepers at night. I proceed by contrasting ethnographic data from the remote A boriginal settlement of Y uendumu, N orthern T erritory, with select elements of the cultural history of E uro‐ A merican sleep. Through ethnographic vignettes, I illuminate how people at Y uendumu commonly arrange themselves in yunta, or rows of sleepers, at night, and how some sleepers awake regularly during the night to ensure the others’ safety. I contrast this with E uro‐ A merican ways of providing a sense of safety to the sleeper through practices of domestic fortification. My comparison revolves around the notion of sight, which in the E uro‐ A merican W est is clearly linked to ideas of knowledge, and at Y uendumu, as I demonstrate, imbued with a sense of care. I conclude by relating the gained insights to participant observation as anthropological method.

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