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What happened to “Anthropology Matters”?

The website of one of the best online anthropology journals Anthropology Matters has been down for about a week now (“404 Page Not Found”). Let’s hope that this isn’t the end for this journal!

UPDATE (30.11.05): Now, the site is up again!

The website of one of the best online anthropology journals Anthropology Matters has been down for about a week now ("404 Page Not Found"). Let's hope that this isn't the end for this journal!

UPDATE (30.11.05): Now, the site…

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Why cellular life in Japan is so different – Interview with anthropologist Mizuko Ito

Technology Review interviews anthropologist Mizuko Ito. Ito has studied the use of mobile phones for six years and is editor of a new book “Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: Mobile Phones in Japanese Life”. Cell phones are used differently depending partly on the way the technology is rolled out, and partly on the culture of each country. She became interested in studying mobile culture partly because mobile technology use in Japan was being driven by young girls:

It’s fairly unusual that teenage girls are seen as technology innovators, so it was a really attractive case for me for a lot of reasons.

In the interview she argues for a kind of culture relativism regarding technological development. You can’t really say the United States should feel that they are “behind” Japan when it comes to cell phone technology, because their technology trajectory has been completely different.

>> read the whole interview

SEE ALSO:

Mizuku Ito’s website

Studying Keitai (or ‘Mobile Phones’ in Japanese) (SavageMinds on Ito’s book)

How Mobile Phones Conquered Japan (Wired News)

More Reviews of Mizuko Ito’s book “Personal, Portable, Pedestrian”

Technologies of the Childhood Imagination- new text by anthropologist Mizuko Ito

Technology Review interviews anthropologist Mizuko Ito. Ito has studied the use of mobile phones for six years and is editor of a new book "Personal, Portable, Pedestrian: Mobile Phones in Japanese Life". Cell phones are used differently depending partly on…

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An Anthropologist’s worst nightmare: Digital Rights Management

Gabriella Coleman tells on her blog a story of a fellow anthropologist whose data were lost through a hard drive crash. Because of Sony’s Digital Right Management he can’t recover the data. “This is something that anyone who uses digital technologies for data gathering and recording, should really care about”, Coleman writes and asks for help. >> read the whole post

Gabriella Coleman tells on her blog a story of a fellow anthropologist whose data were lost through a hard drive crash. Because of Sony's Digital Right Management he can't recover the data. "This is something that anyone who uses digital…

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Anthropology of Trash: An anthropologist as garbage collector

After two years of persuading New York City officials, anthropologist Robin Nagle began her job as garbage collector. She has many concerns about garbage, but she is most concerned about trash collectors, she told the student newspaper The Brown and White: What is it like to wear the uniform? How are you treated when you are in that field in New York City? Are you proud of it or ashamed of it?” She found that while working on the job, “You are very much invisible once you put on the uniform.” >> read the whole story

When she recently gave a series of talks, she wore garments she had plucked from the trash. She said:

The most important uniformed force on the streets of New York is sanitation. But when you look at literature on urban studies, urban anthropology, planning and things like that, there’s nothing about sanitation workers as a workforce, as a community, as a group of people with a civic identity.

>> read more in WasteAge

In her weeklong diary of her work as sanitation worker she writes:

Sanitation workers will learn to read a neighborhood more closely than the most sophisticated sociologist just by observing what it discards, but no one will care about their insights. In fact, no one will care much about them at all, and I want to shield them from this insult most of all.

SEE ALSO:

Robin Nagle: Why We Love to Hate San Men: San men and their work suggest that anything, any object, no matter how laden with what kinds of meaning, can become trash.

The Anthropology of Trash – Nagle’s course materials

After two years of persuading New York City officials, anthropologist Robin Nagle began her job as garbage collector. She has many concerns about garbage, but she is most concerned about trash collectors, she told the student newspaper The Brown and…

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Fired from Yale, anarchist professor points to politics

Well written story in Newsday on anarchist anthropology professor David Graeber who was fired from Yale. He’s described as “one of the brightest minds in his field”, but with his job prospects uncertain, Graeber didn’t renew a lease on his apartment, and splits his time between his New York co-op where he grew u and apartments in New Haven where friends let him sleep. >> read the whole story

UPDATE (8.12.05): Graeber drops appeal, leaves Yale this spring

SEE ALSO

Will the Real McCarthyists Please Stand Up? Free speech on college campuses is taking some disturbing blows. (AlterNet, 25.10.06)

Solidarity with David Graeber – Webpage

In wake of Graeber uproar, up to six anthropology professors may go

Review of Graeber’s book: Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology / download the whole book

Well written story in Newsday on anarchist anthropology professor David Graeber who was fired from Yale. He's described as "one of the brightest minds in his field", but with his job prospects uncertain, Graeber didn't renew a lease on his…

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