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Photos and songs from fieldwork in Siberia, reflections on ethnographic photographing

Estonian anthropologist Janno Simm has his own website with several exciting photos from his fieldwork in Northern Khanty fishing and reindeer communities in Siberia. You can even listen to two Khanty songs.

In his text Reflections on Ethnographic Photographing, he states, that “the best pictures depict the relationship between the ethnographer and the local subjects”.

Estonian anthropologist Janno Simm has his own website with several exciting photos from his fieldwork in Northern Khanty fishing and reindeer communities in Siberia. You can even listen to two Khanty songs.

In his text Reflections on Ethnographic Photographing, he…

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“Aboriginal knowledge is science”

10 aboriginal and four non-aboriginal graduate students from the University of Victoria (British Columbia, Canada) are working with First Nations elders, community leaders and educators to identify science content elements of aboriginal knowledge and determine the most culturally appropriate and effective ways of teaching and learning science, according to University paper The Ring:

Using case studies, field studies, surveys, informal interviews and ethnography (such as elder circles, songs and traditional stories) the graduate students are investigating topics as wide-ranging as how elders transmit ecological knowledge and wisdom, how science is taught through traditional storytelling, and how to use digital video as a learning tool for retaining and transferring aboriginal knowledge.

“The big, central questions here are what is science, and is aboriginal knowledge science? We’re saying it is science, and that every culture has its own science. Right now, there’s a complete blank—traditional knowledge is not only devalued, for most teachers it doesn’t exist”, Gloria Snively, associate professor of science, environmental and marine education, says.

>> read the whole story

UPDATE. Comment by Kerim Friedman:

How can we keep creationism out of our science classrooms if we simultaneously embrace “aboriginal science”? The answer is we can’t.

(…)

It is true that many things aborigines know through their traditional forms of knowledge have, in fact, been proven to coincide with scientific knowledge as well. But some have not. This alone shows that traditional forms of knowledge can never be coterminous with science.

(…)

The solution to the relative status of traditional knowledge compared to science is not to simply label knowledge as “science.” It is to find ways create space within which it can find legitimate expression in our society and be accorded a status other than “superstition.” It is also to better educate people about scientific knowledge and its limits, so that all citizens can better distinguish between good and bad science.

>> read Kerim’s post and the discussion on Savage Minds

SEE ALSO:

Indigenous Peoples’ Day: New Universities for a Multicultural Mexico

New Research Study about Traditional Folk Knowledge related to Plants in Albania

Local taboos could save the seas

10 aboriginal and four non-aboriginal graduate students from the University of Victoria (British Columbia, Canada) are working with First Nations elders, community leaders and educators to identify science content elements of aboriginal knowledge and determine the most culturally appropriate and…

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Tagging and Folksonomies: Xerox Scientists Apply Insights From Ethnography

An older story from last summer: In a (cryptic) press release, Xerox writes that they have used insights from ethnography in product development:

Employing the same ethnographic methods used to observe the social order on a Polynesian atoll or document the culture of natives in southern Siberia, Xerox Corporation (NYSE: XRX) scientists have injected more human know-how into text mining, the practice of using computer analysis of documents to extract new information. The result is better categorization, with higher-quality, customized results.

>> read the whole press release

In their article Tag it as you see it, Computerworld explains us (in a more understandable way), what Xerox actually has found out: They go for using tags for organizing content – as on flickr and del.icio.us:

The best systems allow a combination of predetermined categories with the ability for the end user to create new tags on the fly and organize them in a way that has meaning to the individual as well as to the organization. Recent research at Xerox Corp. shows how this approach can achieve bottom-line results

>> read the whole story: Tag as you like it

SEE ALSO
The practice of classification by tags is also called Folksonomy. See Wikipedia article on folksonomy and article by Kerim Friedman on How folksonomy websites can be used by anthropologists

An older story from last summer: In a (cryptic) press release, Xerox writes that they have used insights from ethnography in product development:

Employing the same ethnographic methods used to observe the social order on a Polynesian atoll or document the…

Read more

The State of the Art of Qualitative and Ethnographic Research in Europe

Just a short note on the new issue of Forum Qualitatice Social Research FQS 6(3) focusing on the “state of the art” of qualitative research in Europe, including ethnography. Tons of interesting (looking) articles, impossible to list here. Strangely enough, many articles on ethnography are written by sociologists, they even talk about sociological ethnography >> continue to FQS 6(3)

Just a short note on the new issue of Forum Qualitatice Social Research FQS 6(3) focusing on the "state of the art" of qualitative research in Europe, including ethnography. Tons of interesting (looking) articles, impossible to list here. Strangely enough,…

Read more

Pacific Ethnography – Anthropology research consultancy on Human and Environmental Interaction

(Via my site statistics) Most anthropological research consultancies concentrate on design and business anthropology. Pacific Ethnography do conduct consumer product research, but they provide human environmental impact research as well and work with non-profit-organisations. One of their project is called “Understanding and Changing Polluting Behavior in Los Angeles”: They develop benchmarking tools to guide water quality education in Los Angeles County watersheds. They have offices both in San Pedro (California), in Santiago (Chile) and in Pondicherry (India).

>> visit Pacific Ethnography’s website

(Via my site statistics) Most anthropological research consultancies concentrate on design and business anthropology. Pacific Ethnography do conduct consumer product research, but they provide human environmental impact research as well and work with non-profit-organisations. One of their project is…

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