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Graeber drops appeal, leaves Yale this spring

Anarchist anthropologist David Graeber agreed to leave Yale University this spring, dropping an appeal over whether his termination was politically motivated, according to ap. David Graeber said he will teach two classes next semester, then take a yearlong paid sabbatical, after which he will not return:

“Normally, you get a sabbatical on the condition that you come back and teach the following year. I’m getting the sabbatical on the condition that I don’t come back and teach.”

His final two classes will be an introduction to anthropology and a course titled “Direct Action and Radical Social Theory.”

UPDATE: Article no longer online, read rather:

Graeber agrees to leave University (Yale Daily News)

SEE ALSO:

Fired from Yale, anarchist professor points to politics

Solidarity with David Graeber – Webpage

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

Anarchist anthropologist David Graeber agreed to leave Yale University this spring, dropping an appeal over whether his termination was politically motivated, according to ap. David Graeber said he will teach two classes next semester, then take a yearlong paid sabbatical,…

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Why anthropology fails to arouse interest among the public – Engaging Anthropology (2)

As anthropology has grown, its perceived wider relevance has diminished. Why is this so? In his second chapter in the book Engaging Anthropology, Norwegian anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen gives us several possible explanations. On the one hand, there are external factors f.ex. recent university reforms, inspired by neoliberalist marked theories:

Universities are being turned into factories. Academics have, as a consequence, lost much of the time they could formerly devote to engagement in greater society. (…) The ongoing formalisation of the recognition of skills through never-ending evaluations of research, auditing and other forms of “professionalisation” threatens to take the creativity out of academic life, and also contributes to isolating it further from society. (…) Students are no longer encouraged to be intellectuals, but to specialize and become professionals.

But the main reasons for the diminishing role of anthropology lie within the discipline. Hylland Eriksen lists several “recipes for cocooning”:

Recipe Nr 1: Elitism:

Anthropology, unlike some other academic disciplines, has yet to escape fully from the mouldy lounges and pompous hallways of pre-war university life. In spite of the demographic explosion it has gone through since the Second World War, and in spite of the democratization of higher education, anthropology somehow remains an elite subject in the English-speaking world.

(…)

The early predominance of minorities and women at the very center of the discipline was significant. Evans-Pritchard’s generation did not even want anthropology to be taught as an undergraduate subject. In Britain, the subject remains dominated by the department of the elite universities.

(…)

In spite of its considerable growth, anthropology still cultivates its self-identity as a counter-culture, its members belonging to a kind of secret society whose initiates possess exclusive keys for understanding, indispensable for making sense of the world, but alas, largely inaccessible for outsiders.

Recipe 2: Myopic specialisation resulting from “my ethnography”

The malinowskian glorification of the detailed, synchronic single-society study encourages specialization and gives the highest marks to the colleague who remains loyal to her fieldnotes thoughout her career

Recipe 3: Insisting on irreducible complexity

Anthropologists are skilled at exposing oversimplifications. This is one of our disciplines strengths, but complex answers are non marketable commodities with respect to the mass media and the general reader, as we all know. Few monographs or even articles have a simple point to make, most anthropologists are reluctant to simplify their insights. But there are exceptions, f.ex. Levi Strauss – one “of the normally least readable anthropologists”):

Levi-Strauss’ Myth and Meaning (1978) and his interview book with Didier Eribon, De Pres et de Loin (1988), convey the main elements in his structuralism and his intellectual vision without losing, presumably, a single potential reader on the way. Many of us have something to learn from Levi-Strauss in this regard.

Recipe 4: The post-colonial critiques and the loss of the native:

After the post-colonial critique of Western representations, the collaps of classic cultural relativism and the damaging postmodernist autocritique of the 1980s, anthropology has become modest in its claims, introverted in its intellectual perspective and even more reluctant than before to raise the big issues in generally intelligible ways

Recipe 5: Anthropology as a subversive kind of activity

There might be totally different explanations for the failure of anthropology to sustain a visible public presence:

One should not rule out the possibiliy that anthropologists are often understood, but disagreed with – its perspectives threaten to subvert values and ideas held dear by its potential non-academic audience. The very idea of anthropology as a cultural (auto)critique (…) presupposes that there is a great demand for cultural self-criticism out there. This, plainly, may not be the case.

Recipe 6: Priviledging analysis over narrative

Anthropologists are bad writers! This is Hylland Eriksens most important argument:

To my mind, the single most important characteristic of anthropological writings is that it tends to be chiefly analytical. This means that it is more difficult to get into and less easy to remember than narratives. Stories are the stuff of life; analysis is for specialists. (…) There is a tendency to combine a penchant for complexity with a lack of engaging, sustained narrative. (…) As a result, it appears that anthropological texts are readable only by other anthropologists, who have learnt – the hard way – to read them.

But there are exceptions. He mentiones Katy Gardner’s “Songs from Rivers Edge. Stories from a Bengladeshi River (1997)” and Tristes Tropiques by Claude Livi-Strauss (1978).

The problem:

There are many brilliant narratives in anthropological literature, but they’re usually hidden in analysis. (…) History is almost alone among academic subjects to fuse original research and popular writing in the very same texts

MORE ABOUT ENGAGING ANTHROPOLOGY:

The Secret of Good Ethnographies – Engaging Anthropology Part III

More and more anthropologists, but they’re absent from public debates – “Engaging Anthropology” (Part I)

SEE ALSO

Archive: Knowledge Sharing and Open Access Anthropology

As anthropology has grown, its perceived wider relevance has diminished. Why is this so? In his second chapter in the book Engaging Anthropology, Norwegian anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen gives us several possible explanations. On the one hand, there are external…

Read more

Ironies regarding “Establishing Dialogue among International Anthropological Communities”

Not much dialogue here: When trying to read the Anthropology News Article “Establishing Dialogue among International Anthropological Communities”, logged in with my University account, I get following message by AnthroSource:

Universitet i Oslo
Sorry, you do not have access to this article

.

SEE ALSO

Open Access Anthropology – Debate on Savage Minds

antropologi.info Special on Open Access Anthropology

Not much dialogue here: When trying to read the Anthropology News Article "Establishing Dialogue among International Anthropological Communities", logged in with my University account, I get following message by AnthroSource:

Universitet i Oslo
Sorry, you do not have access to this…

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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…

Read more

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

SEE ALSO:

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…

Read more