Dumping or Trumping
Bright side of the current reaction. The decline of the European powers was bolstered by the land grab that was the USA – basically the oppression of indigenous…
Bright side of the current reaction. The decline of the European powers was bolstered by the land grab that was the USA – basically the oppression of indigenous…
Water is the most immediate requisite element for human survival. For most of humanity’s history (written and unwritten), where people could live was constrained by the need to…
Savage Minds welcomes guest blogger Daniel Souleles. This is the first post in a sequence called Strange Rumblings in the Meritocracy. Yes, this title is clickbait. Please, allow me a…
Prof. Jost Gippert, Sprachwissenschaftler und Kaukasiologe an der Goethe-Universität, hat zu seinem 60. Geburtstag ein originelles Geschenk erhalten: einen Wikipedia-Eintrag in 72 Sprachen. Prof. Dr. …
“I was feeling very Prince today,” Isaiah told me, on his way to a photo shoot. He describes his style as “sleek, edgy, and androgynous,” all attributes the…
Door Peter Versteeg. Goedemorgen meneer, ik heb hier een brochure voor u met als titel “Komt er ooit een eind aan pijn en verdriet?” Mag ik die aan…
For this installment of the Top of the Heap series, I spoke with Helen Verran, a historian and philosopher of science who is Adjunct Professor at Charles Darwin…
Another set of great papers from the journals in April. Enjoy! Social Science & Medicine ‘I knew before I was told’: Breaches, cues and clues in the…
Lecture from last Friday at SOAS in London; it starts around 30 minutes in to follow Hocart’s lead to comment on cosmology, governmentality, and anthropology.
Again, I have the pleasure to teach the Seminar “Indigenous Media” for the MA Program in Visual and Media Anthropology at the Free University Berlin. Find below a…
Der Kommentar erschien am 3. 5. 2016 in der Wiener Zeitung. Je mehr sich Europa nach außen abschottet, desto öfter stolpern Leser über Formulierungen wie „fremde Kulturkreise“ oder…
In Argentina, indigenous people have been historically marginalised and rendered invisible (Gordillo & Hirsch 2003). However, over the last couple of decades there has been a timid effort…
On March 3, 2016, three anthropologists at the University of Colorado–Carole McGranahan, Kaifa Roland, and Bianca C. Williams–sat down with Faye V. Harrison, distinguished professor of Afr…
This is the first in a two-part post in which Lindsay A. Bell (SUNY Oswego) describes her attempt to organize a senior seminar course around producing a podcast…
“How to Email Your Professor (without being annoying AF)” (Medium.com) by former professor turned academic writing consultant Laura Portwood-Stacer provides an easy step-by-step guide for students on …
In this final post for The Person in the (Big) Data edition of Ethnography Matters, we provide a collection of five mixed methods used by researchers to shine…
In this penultimate post for The Person in the (Big) Data edition of EM, Elizabeth Dubois @lizdubois provides a step-by-step account of how the trace interviewing process works. Trace interv…
Dem Presserat wird bei der derzeitigen Berichterstattung sicher nicht langweilig – das zeigen schon die vielen gemeldeten Artikel. Um zwei Entscheidungen herauszugreifen: Der Presserat gab letzt…
Today’s inquiry into the nature of legal fictions takes us to Jordan’s government-run Sharia courts, where the concept of “divorce before consummation” (ṭalāq qabl al-dakhūl) has become something…
We live in the age of information, so why do we still make bad decisions? Or worse, no decisions? — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
We live in the age of information, so why do we still make bad decisions? Or worse, no decisions? — Read more on ScientificAmerican.com
It has been a whirlwind of activity at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures this semester. The spring semester is ending and many students are leaving campus, but…
An intriguing call for papers: Aesthetic: The New Zealand Symposium of Gastronomy Auckland, 2-4 September 2016. The Symposium of Gastronomy welcomes scholars, cooks, food writers and armchair foodies…
I was sitting in the brightly lit workroom at the Pitt Rivers Museum on a frigid day in November 2010, when I opened one of the bags that…