Despite the increased integration of the village with a national and global market, the confinued existence of Limbu language and cultural practises emphasizes the active role villagers have played in shaping their current condition.
When anthropologists have tackled class, it is, paradoxically, class as status group, class as defined by consumption patterns. In the Nepalese context, the leading and much-cited work in this genre is Mark Liechty's Suitably Modern: Making Middle-Class Culture in a New Consumer Society (Liechty 2003). This is a fine and, in the Nepalese context, pathbreaking work, but it does not broach the question of the production of middle-class identity in schools, offices, factories, and other workplaces. Nor does it ask the classic questions about ownership, wealth, and land that underlie the emergence of class.
It is therefore particularly welcome that a young anthropologist should tackle the emergence of class in a rural setting using the quantitative survey methods necessary for any economic anthropology, but also participant observation and close-up, hands-on fieldwork (both literal and metaphorical). Ian Fitzpatrick was also accomplished in both local languages (Nepali and Limbu). The Limbus are lucky to have attracted an ethnographer with such linguistic skills.
Cardamom is one of the few cash crops that, if a peasant works hard and has a reasonable run of luck, can lead to serious accumulation of wealth in a relatively small number of years.
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