Read the foreword by Mara Soetoro-Ng
President Barack Obama's mother, S. Ann Dunham, was an economic
anthropologist and rural development consultant who worked in
several countries including Indonesia. Dunham received her
doctorate in 1992. She died in 1995, at the age of 52, before
having the opportunity to revise her dissertation for publication,
as she had planned. Dunham's dissertation adviser Alice G. Dewey
and her fellow graduate student Nancy I. Cooper undertook the
revisions at the request of Dunham's daughter, Maya Soetoro-Ng. The
result is" Surviving against the Odds," a book based on Dunham's
research over a period of fourteen years among the rural
metalworkers of Java, the island home to nearly half Indonesia's
population. "Surviving against the Odds" reflects Dunham's
commitment to helping small-scale village industries survive; her
pragmatic, non-ideological approach to research and problem
solving; and her impressive command of history, economic data, and
development policy. Along with photographs of Dunham, the book
includes many pictures taken by her in Indonesia.
After Dunham married Lolo Soetoro in 1967, she and her
six-year-old son, Barack Obama, moved from Hawai'i to Soetoro's
home in Jakarta, where Maya Soetoro was born three years later.
Barack returned to Hawai'i to attend school in 1971. Dedicated to
Dunham's mother Madelyn, her adviser Alice, and "Barack and Maya,
who seldom complained when their mother was in the field,"
"Surviving against the Odds" centers on the metalworking industries
in the Javanese village of Kajar. Focusing attention on the small
rural industries overlooked by many scholars, Dunham argued that
wet-rice cultivation was not the only viable economic activity in
rural Southeast Asia.
"Surviving against the Odds" includes a preface by the editors,
Alice G. Dewey and Nancy I. Cooper, and a foreword by her daughter
Maya Soetoro-Ng, each of which discusses Dunham and her career. In
his afterword, the anthropologist and Indonesianist Robert W.
Hefner explores the content of "Surviving against the Odds," its
relation to anthropology when it was researched and written, and
its continuing relevance today.
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