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

Just months after the Anthropology Department at Yale University voted not to renew sociocultural anthropology professor David Graeber’s contract based on his political views, rumors are swirling that the department may lose as many as six additional professors by the end of the academic year, Yale Daily News reports

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Solidarity with David Graeber-Webpage

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

Just months after the Anthropology Department at Yale University voted not to renew sociocultural anthropology professor David Graeber's contract based on his political views, rumors are swirling that the department may lose as many as six additional professors by the…

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Visual designanthropology: Watch film about the design chair online

Anthropologist Kristiina Lavia has already three years ago made a film about designing a chair: She portraits the Norwegian designers Svein Gusrud, Torstein Nilsen and Sigurd Strøm – and the way they experience their work with design and creativity. Lavia is currently giving the first course in design anthropology for designers at The Oslo School of Architecture and Design. She even encouraged her students to publish their fieldnotes in a blog (only in Norwgian, though).

>> more about the film / watch the film (English subtitles) (I have problems with viewing the film with Firefox, it works with IE)

Anthropologist Kristiina Lavia has already three years ago made a film about designing a chair: She portraits the Norwegian designers Svein Gusrud, Torstein Nilsen and Sigurd Strøm – and the way they experience their work with design and creativity.…

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Why blogging matters: Handbook for global bloggers is out

A quick note: Much praise for the Reporters Without Borders “Handbook for bloggers” on the GlobalVoices-website. Maybe it will be useful for academics as well?

“It is the first truly useful book I’ve seen aimed at the kinds of bloggers featured here at Global Voices every day: People who have views and information that they want to share with the world beyond their own national borders. They are often people whose perspectives are not well represented in their own country’s media, and certainly not well reported by the international media.

(…)

The Handbook for Bloggers is for people who want to be serious participants in the emergent online global conversation: How to set up a quality, credible blog. How to get it noticed. And.. if you’re in a country where there government might not like what you’re saying, how to avoid getting in trouble when you by-pass the information gatekeepers and talk directly to the world.

(…)

The most inspiring section is the “Personal Accounts,” short essays from bloggers around the world about why they blog and why blogging matters.”

>> read the whole review by Rebecca MacKinnon

>> download the Handbook (1,7MB, pdf)

A quick note: Much praise for the Reporters Without Borders "Handbook for bloggers" on the GlobalVoices-website. Maybe it will be useful for academics as well?

"It is the first truly useful book I’ve seen aimed at the kinds of bloggers featured…

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Why hasn’t anthropology changed the world? New book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen

A new book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo, might answer some of our questions on why our discipline has not gained the respect it in our view deserves.

According to some first reviews (the book will be published not before November 2005), Hylland Eriksen demonstrates that the fault is partly our own:

If anthropology matters as a key tool with which to understand modern society beyond the ivory towers of academia, why are so few anthropologists willing to come forward in times of national or global crisis? Eriksen argues that anthropology needs to rediscover the art of narrative and abandon arid analysis and, more provocatively, anthropologists need to lose their fear of plunging into the vexed issues modern societies present.

>> read more at Berg Publishers

SEE ALSO:
Thomas Hylland Eriksen’s homepage
antropologi.info – Interview with Hylland Eriksen on anthropology and internet

A new book by Thomas Hylland Eriksen, Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Oslo, might answer some of our questions on why our discipline has not gained the respect it in our view deserves.

According to some first…

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“Minimal willingness to post one’s own work online”, survey by the American Anthropological Association reveals

Here are some interesting findings of a survey by the American Anthropological Association about members’ current practices for communicating electronically about the association and their research. In the anthropological blogosphere, we often wonder about why anthropologists lag behind other scientists in publishing papers online:

“Although there is a wide recognition of the usefulness of posting conference papers and supplementary materials online, there is minimal willingness to post one’s own work, and there is even less willingness to submit online comments on annual meeting papers. This is true regardless of age or employment status of the respondent.

(..)

There is marked interest in annual meeting papers and abstracts being electronically accessible indefinitely, coupled with little interest in the preservation of online bulletin boards and interactive discussion forums for more than four months.

(…)

In terms of who should be permitted access to material related to AAA annual meetings, most believe that session information and abstracts should be made available in searchable format online to the general public. Yet, papers, works-in-progress and comments should be limited to session participants, and perhaps AAA members.

(…)

Results suggest that respondents value the idea of Creative Commons and the Open Access model (such as AnthroCommons); yet, only a third of the respondents who completed this survey, or roughly the number who accessed AnthroCommons, completed this question.”

>> read the whole article in Anthropology News

UPDATE: See Judd Antin’s comments:

“Is there something fundamental about anthropology that makes the discipline averse to an open model? Anthropology is, after all, based on fieldnotes, which are deeply personal, and often private. Maybe these value extend to other forms of writing as well, such as notes, conference papers, and even online comments. Many anthropologists were (and in some cases still are) also indoctrinated with the idea that anthropology is about the lone ethnographer, trudging off into the jungle to find his or her ‘people.’ If anthropologists believe that doing anthropology is a lone enterprise, and further that the product of their work is too deeply personal and individual to share, does that erect an insurmountable barrier to Open Source Anthropology, at least for the foreseeable future?”

>> read the whole post

UPDATE 2: Very interesting inside-information by Alex Golub on Savage Minds. We hear “the native’s point of view” on publishing papers online:

“People like to use email to send papers to each other. Why? Because it’s private, they already know how to use it, they use email as a file system to store, index, and retrieve attachments, they’re not actively interested in adopting new technology for its own sake (if it’s not broken, don’t fix it), and new genres are not obviously sufficiently better than existing onces to induce a switch. In other words, we use email because it is a good tool for the job we want to do.

Why would people be averse to publishing their papers online before the AAA meetings? Two things occur to me here. Come on, folks: we write our papers the night before we give them. (…) Second (and more importantly), conference papers are some of the worst work we produce—they are poorly edited, the citations are often incomplete or wrong, and the arguments we make in them may change over time. (…) Why in the world would we as scholars want these hesitant, initial steps of our thoughts to appear at the top of a Google search for our name?”

>> read Alex Golub’s post on Savage Minds

SEE ALSO

antropologi.info survey: Six anthropologists on Anthropology and Internet

Open Source Anthropology : Are anthropologists serious about sharing knowledge?

antrpopologi.info Special: Open Access Anthropology

Here are some interesting findings of a survey by the American Anthropological Association about members’ current practices for communicating electronically about the association and their research. In the anthropological blogosphere, we often wonder about why anthropologists lag behind other…

Read more