Ignition Stories: Indigenous Fire Ecology in the Indo-Australian Monsoon 
Zone by Cynthia Fowler

How do tropical farmers think about, handle, and respond to fire? What is 
the role of fire in the coevolution of self, society, and environment? In 
the compelling narratives that make up this ethnography, the lives of Kodi 
women, men, and children unfold within an island landscape that has been 
shaped by 14,000 years of anthropogenic fires and 300,000 years of natural 
fires.
Ignition Stories connects the Kodi people who design fires with their living 
kin and their ancient ancestors, then links them to nearby communities in 
neighboring hamlets, to other ethno-linguistic groups across Sumba, and to 
far-flung multiethnic, virtual coalitions. In this book, Fowler searches 
through Kodi people's mundane fire management practices as well as the 
shared beliefs, myths, rituals, and arts of this Papuan-Austronesian culture 
and the intimate emotions of individual members of the community to explain 
the unique character of people and landscape in the Indo-Australian monsoon 
zone.
Ignition Stories conveys the fantastic ability of fire to communicate human 
ideas, perceptions, meanings, symbols, emotions, and desires. Using an 
innovative blend of anthropology and fire ecology, Fowler explores the 
globally-relevant topic of the risks and benefits of burning for both people 
and ecosystems, and captures the complexity of human-environment relations 
in fire-adapted landscapes. Fowler shows us how the senses of self that 
produce collective identities intersect with cycles of disturbance and 
succession to create diverse microecologies and emergent societies.
This book is part of the Ritual Studies Monograph Series, edited by Pamela 
J. Stewart and Andrew Strathern, Department of Anthropology, University of 
Pittsburgh.

Learn more about this new book here: http://www.cap-
press.com/books/isbn/9781611631159/Ignition-Stories 

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