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Keith Hart and Thomas Hylland Eriksen: This is 21st century anthropology

(Links checked 8.9.2019) What holds humanity together? What are the hidden or unacknowledged features of mainstream society? These are the issues that 21st century anthropology should address, Thomas Hylland Eriksen writes in his paper The perilous identity politics of anthropology, Keynote lecture at the conference “21st century Anthropology” at the University of Oxford 28–29 June 2007.

“Obsessed with everything that divides humanity for a hundred years, anthropology could now be ready to return to the commonalities, that which holds humanity together”, the Norwegian anthropologist suggests.

And rather than studying down, we have to begin to study sideways and up. “The crowded field of minority studies”, he writes, “in no way matched by an equal interest in majority studies”:

A possible solution might consist in making a real effort to study the basic institutions of society – any society – essentially through ethnographic methods, in the same way as we should – again – begin to address the central intellectual questions of today, in the domains of development, democracy, rights, human nature and the environmental crisis. This is being done already, but in too modest a way to make an impact proper. (…) Anthropological studies of everyday life in a modern society, municipal politics, diplomacies, government corporations, schools, hospitals and even military academies exist, but most of them focus too much on culture and too little on the features of the social organisation, in its formal as well as informal aspects.
(…)
Anthropology should confidently locate its focus of enquiry to the centre of society, using ethnographic methods not so much to create wonderment and surprise, but to reveal hidden or unacknowledged features of mainstream society. In this way we would be able to generate knowledge which is not only truthful, but also relevant and – dare I say it – useful. (…) Just as our predecessors took on the central institutions in their small-scale societies, we should now do the same thing in large-scale societies.

>> read the whole paper “The perilous identity politics of anthropology” (Link updated)

Nearly at the same time, Keith Harth published his paper Toward a new human universal. Rethinking anthropology for the twenty-first century, a lecture he is going to hold at the Center for 21st century studies, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee on the September 7th.

Keith Hart argues in a similar way. In his opinion, “the task of building a global civil society for the twenty-first century, even a world state, is an urgent one and anthropological visions should play their part in that”:

The solution to anthropology’s problems cannot be found in increased specialization, in the discovery of new areas of social life to colonize with the aid of old professional paradigms or in a return to literary scholarship disguised as a new dialogical form. It requires new patterns of social engagement extending beyond the universities to the widest reaches of world society.

This in turn requires us first, to acknowledge how people everywhere are pushing back the boundaries of the old society and second, to be open to universality, most versions of which have been driven underground by national capitalism and would be buried forever if the present corporate privatization of intellectual life is allowed to succeed.

(…)

So, given the precariousness of contemporary anthropology as an academic institution, the issue of its future needs to be couched in broader terms than those defined by the profession itself. (…) Rather I have sought inspiration in Kant’s philosophy and in the critique of unequal society that originates with Rousseau. ‘Anthropology’ would then mean whatever we need to know about humanity as a whole if we want to build a more equal world fit for everyone.

>> read the whole paper “Toward a new human universal. Rethinking anthropology for the twenty-first century” (link updated 19.7.12)

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(Links checked 8.9.2019) What holds humanity together? What are the hidden or unacknowledged features of mainstream society? These are the issues that 21st century anthropology should address, Thomas Hylland Eriksen writes in his paper The perilous identity politics of anthropology,…

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John Postill on media anthropology and internet activism in Malaysia

Is Internet making any significant difference to the governance of an multiethnic middle-income suburb of Kuala Lumpur? Anthropologist John Postill has been on fieldwork there and sent me a working paper about his research Field theory and the political process black box: analysing Internet activism in a Kuala Lumpur suburb.

The suburb is renowned in Malaysian ICT policy circles for its rich diversity of ‘e-community’ initiatives – and it was the vibrant Internet scene that attracted Postill to the locality. In his paper he discusses several approaches within media anthropology:

In recent years Pierre Bourdieu’s field theory has received increased attention from sociologists, anthropologists, media scholars and others (Benson and Neveu 2005). (…) Yet instead of adopting Bourdieu’s field theory wholesale I concentrate on an area of field theory that is underdeveloped in Bourdieu but has an earlier history within political anthropology, namely the field-theoretical study of political processes such as social dramas undertaken by Victor Turner and other Manchester scholars.

>> read the whole paper

On his website, Postill has published lots of related papers.

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How Media and Digital Technology Empower Indigenous Survival

Is Internet making any significant difference to the governance of an multiethnic middle-income suburb of Kuala Lumpur? Anthropologist John Postill has been on fieldwork there and sent me a working paper about his research Field theory and the political process…

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Now online: Third issue of “Ecological and Environmental Anthropology”

The third issue of Ecological and Environmental Anthropology, an open access peer-reviewed journal published by the University of Georgia is out and consists of four book reviews and two papers:

Keri Vacanti Brondo, Laura Woods:
Garifuna Land Rights and Ecotourism as Economic Development in Honduras’ Cayos Cochinos Marine Protected Area

David Driscoll, Afua Appiah-Yeboah, Philip Salib, Douglas J Rupert:
Merging Qualitative and Quantitative Data in Mixed Methods Research: How To and Why Not

As the editors write in their editorial (pdf):

The articles and book reviews in this issue underscore the crucial role that the field of anthropology can play in helping to identify the causes and the roots of environmental problems and global insecurities, and the impact of those insecurities on the human condition. Interdisciplinary perspectives offered by the growing fields of ecological and environmental anthropology and constructive social science can offer rich, practical insights into biodiversity conservation and natural resource management from a more people-centered perspective.

Ecological and environmental anthropology and similar fields dedicated to the study of human-environment relations can offer possible solutions to environmental problems by informing public policy of alternative knowledge systems and by drawing attention to the impacts of policy and macro-level processes on local lives, human health, and regional economies.

Their website has been upgraded recently and now offers RSS-feeds!

>> Overview over Vol 3, No 1 (2007) of Ecological and Environmental Anthropology

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The third issue of Ecological and Environmental Anthropology, an open access peer-reviewed journal published by the University of Georgia is out and consists of four book reviews and two papers:

Keri Vacanti Brondo, Laura Woods:
Garifuna Land Rights and Ecotourism as…

Read more

Bilingualism and multiculturalism: New issue of Durham Anthropology Journal

Volume 14 Issue 1 – Summer 2007 of the Durham Anthropology Journal is out. The Open Access journal is edited by postgraduate students at the Department of Anthropology of Durham University. The new issue consists of four articles:

Chris Allen: The death of multiculturalism: blaming and shaming British Muslims
The paper questions the sometimes tenuous relationship between ‘multiculturalism’ and notions of ‘Britishness’ as well as their effect and resonance contemporarily on perceptions and attitudes shown towards Muslims.

Mark Jamieson: Language and the Process of Socialisation Amongst Bilingual Children in a Nicaraguan Village
Social scientists have in recent years devoted a good deal of attention to the role of language in the lives of children. Few, however, have focused on the relationship between language and the logic by which categorical distinctions between children and adults are reproduced.

Michael Carrithers: Story Seeds and the Inchoate
The German word Vergangenheitsbewältigung, ‘overcoming the [Nazi] past’, became a key term to describe the extraordinary form of negative nationalism that took hold in German political culture by the 1980’s. Here the origins of the term, and its rhetorical character, are examined as a case in the study of rhetoric in culture.

Kristin Klingaman and Helen Ball: Anthropology of caesarean section birth and breastfeeding: Rationale for evolutionary medicine on the postnatal ward
Our research examines birth events, feeding strategies and the attitudes underlying them in order to better understand how modes of delivery and postnatal arrangements affect breastfeeding outcomes, maternal satisfaction and safety

>> Frontpage of Durham Anthropology Journal – Volume 14 Issue 1 – Summer 2007

Volume 14 Issue 1 - Summer 2007 of the Durham Anthropology Journal is out. The Open Access journal is edited by postgraduate students at the Department of Anthropology of Durham University. The new issue consists of four articles:

Chris Allen: The…

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Cultures of Consumption: Re-thinking the relationship between consumer and citizen

Inspiring research contradicts journalistic and academic presumptions. It seems that the multidisciplinary research program Cultures of Consumption has produced inspiring papers. Anthropologist Daniel Miller gives us a summary of a public presentation of the research results on the blog Material World:

As usual in such programme the highlights came from research that contradicts journalistic and academic presumptions. For example we heard evidence that international retailing firms find that they have to raise their standards to meet Chinese consumers who are more demanding than those in other areas. Another paper demonstrated that people have extended family meals in the UK just as much now as in the 1970s (though migrating from dinner table to kitchen table) and that in terms of food behaviour generally there is no evidence for global convergence e.g. becoming more like the US.

>> read the whole post

The research project has a great website. The snapshops from the projects provide reader-friendly summaries. Lots of working papers can be downloaded.

Inspiring research contradicts journalistic and academic presumptions. It seems that the multidisciplinary research program Cultures of Consumption has produced inspiring papers. Anthropologist Daniel Miller gives us a summary of a public presentation of the research results on the blog Material…

Read more