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Ten Little Niggers: Tsunami, tribal circus and racism

Kai Friese, Outlook India

Yes, anthropology is alive and well, in the islands and it’s having a field day in the news. The Indian Express on Sunday gave us a double-page spread (slugged ‘Black and White’) with a field guide to “the tribes and their survival tricks”. The Great Andamanese “whose strongest physical characteristics are distinctly Negroid”; the Jarawas who “look at heavenly bodies and can decipher what is to come”; the Shompen, “the only primitive tribe of the islands with Mongoloid features”, and so on.

It’s revealing that most journalists have invoked racial labels like Mongoloid or Negroid (I’ve even read ‘Negrative’) only as a marker of primitivism. Meanwhile, NDTV’s more sensitive reporter wittered on about the “dignity” of Nicobarese tribals, and the BBC’s web edition fretted about the fate of “some rare indigenous tribal groups”. >> continue

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– The Great Andamanese did not sense the arrival of the tsunamis

Kai Friese, Outlook India

Yes, anthropology is alive and well, in the islands and it’s having a field day in the news. The Indian Express on Sunday gave us a double-page spread (slugged ‘Black and White’) with a field guide to…

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California Digital Library: 61 Free Anthropology Books in fulltext

So cool! Alex Golub has discovered that The California Digital Library provides free access to – at the moment – 61 anthropological books in fulltext.

His recommendations: Rob Brightman’s Grateful Prey , The Calligraphic State, Maring Hunters and Traders, History and Tradition in Melanesian Anthropology, The Heart of the Pearlshell, Circumstantial Deliveries (Rodney Needham at his Needhamy-ist), and Wage, Trade and Exchange in Melanesia. >> continue to the Anthropology Book Section, California Digital Library

So cool! Alex Golub has discovered that The California Digital Library provides free access to - at the moment - 61 anthropological books in fulltext.

His recommendations: Rob Brightman’s Grateful Prey , The Calligraphic State, Maring Hunters and Traders, History and…

Read more

– The Great Andamanese did not sense the arrival of the tsunamis

KUTV.com / ap

PORT BLAIR, India (AP) The last few dozen remaining members of an ancient indigenous tribe in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands said they raced up a mountain to escape a devastating tsunami – and avoid extinction.

“I am the king. They follow what I say,” said Jiroki, the king of the Great Andamanese tribe, wearing a red T-shirt and shorts. Contrary to speculation by some anthropologists, his wife said the Great Andamanese did not sense the impending arrival of the tsunamis. >> continue

Remark: Interesting to see how anthropologists “speculate” … they still dream about the nobel savage. Interesting to see how journalists like the Andamanese to be like. Derogatorily and romantizingly at the same time! they presented them first (example )as “stone age peoples” that want to be left alone. Interesting to read about the king telling us in this article: “We feel nice interacting with the outside world. Earlier our heart was only in hunting,” the king said. “There were no movies, nothing.”

UPDATE: Michael I. Niman, Alternet, writes:

“The indigenous populations of the Andaman and Nicobar islands have had extensive contact with the outside world. These descendents of African peoples were first visited by Marco Polo who described them as “No better than wild beasts.” European slave-traders later raided the islands for slaves. Anthropologists report that slavers continued to raid the islands well into the second half of the 20th century, long after the international slave trade was thought dead.”

KUTV.com / ap

PORT BLAIR, India (AP) The last few dozen remaining members of an ancient indigenous tribe in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands said they raced up a mountain to escape a devastating tsunami - and avoid extinction.

"I am the…

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New feature in development: Search anthropological websites and journals

On a new search page on antropologi.info you can search for information on several anthropology-related websites – among others:

– anthrobase.com (Collection of anthropological texts)
– American Anthropological Association
– SOSIG Social Science Information Gateway
– Wikipedia
– EVIFA (one of the best virtual anthropological libraries (in German and English)
– Anthroglobe (Journal)
– Anthropology Matters (Journal)
– Qualitative Research Net (Journal)

>> continue to antropologi.info Search

On a new search page on antropologi.info you can search for information on several anthropology-related websites - among others:

- anthrobase.com (Collection of anthropological texts)
- American Anthropological Association
- SOSIG Social Science Information Gateway
- Wikipedia
- EVIFA (one of the best virtual anthropological…

Read more

“When somebody’s rights are diminished, as anthropologist, I have to speak out”

Lawrence Journal World

It seems more the stuff of an action movie than an anthropology professor’s field work. But Kansas University professor Bart Dean found himself in the middle of a violent showdown between corrupt Peruvian officials and the indigenous Cocama-Cocamilla people.

Seven months later, Dean has become embroiled in a nationwide controversy in Peru and is working with a group of KU students to document the abuses on the Internet. “My general sense is that when somebody’s rights are diminished, mine are as well,” Dean said. “As a concerned citizen and as a professor of anthropology, I had to speak out.”

Earlier this week he and his students unveiled a preliminary version of an Internet site, www.cocama.org, that eventually will contain video footage, photos and other information about the attack and political problems in Peru. >> continue

UPDATE 1.8.05PS: Their website is no longer accessible

Lawrence Journal World

It seems more the stuff of an action movie than an anthropology professor's field work. But Kansas University professor Bart Dean found himself in the middle of a violent showdown between corrupt Peruvian officials and the indigenous Cocama-Cocamilla…

Read more