ABSTRACT This article revisits the work of the late anthropologist, Paul T.W. Baxter, re-reading his photographs and writing on pastoralism in northern Kenya through the prism of contemporary interest in… Click to show full abstract
ABSTRACT This article revisits the work of the late anthropologist, Paul T.W. Baxter, re-reading his photographs and writing on pastoralism in northern Kenya through the prism of contemporary interest in anthropology in the ‘other-than-human’. It contextualises Baxter’s work within a wider school of anthropology of pastoralism, and his photography within wider photographic practice in anthropology and in the region of Kenya where he worked in the 1950s. We argue that his work – and that of others of the structural-functionalist era – offers rich detail that can be mined by later anthropologists with different theoretical interests and influences. In particular, his photographs speak – albeit partially – to a wider intertwining of human and animal lives in northern Kenya of the 1950s beyond his own focus on pastoralist livelihoods, an intertwining that resonates with current work on human–animal sociality.
               
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