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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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Secret rituals: Folklorist studied the military as an occupational folk group

The website of The Association of Feminist Anthropology is another place to look for anthropology books and ethnographies.

One of the books reviewed is written by folklorist Carol Burke “Camp All-American, Hanoi Jane, and the High-And-Tight: Gender, Folklore, and Changing Military Culture”:

Drawing from her background as a folklorist and an “insider” who served as a civilian faculty member of the Naval Academy, Carol Burke examines the military as an occupational folk group and unpacks the various aspects of military culture that continue to separate and exclude on the basis of gender. In addition to highlighting the more obvious customs and ceremonies, Burke also attends to the secret rituals and informal aspects that, even when officially “banned,” are still practiced in boot camps, military academies, and aboard submarines and aircraft carriers.

>> read the review (updated link)

>> another review at H-Net

>> more book reviews by the Association for Feminist Anthropology

The website of The Association of Feminist Anthropology is another place to look for anthropology books and ethnographies.

One of the books reviewed is written by folklorist Carol Burke "Camp All-American, Hanoi Jane, and the High-And-Tight: Gender, Folklore,…

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The need for a “New anthropology” – a new anthropology blog

The first entry of a new blog called “New anthropology” starts presenting us new ways of anthropology

“Two ways to express what I call New Anthropology.
1. The new theoretical concern should be highlighted: A Cognitive Turn!
2. The new learning methods should be applied: Timeless and remote learning on the net!!”

Lots of links! (unfortunately some sites require a browser of doubtful quality)

>> continue

The first entry of a new blog called "New anthropology" starts presenting us new ways of anthropology

"Two ways to express what I call New Anthropology.
1. The new theoretical concern should be highlighted: A Cognitive Turn!
2. The new learning…

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The Corporate Anthropology Center?

Has anybody heard of the “Corporate Anthropology Center”? “The Global Hub for Cultural Business Anthropology”? They offer “Training and Certification – Consumer Research and Database – IntraCorporate Services – Competition Analysis” etc (extremly business-like rhetoric!).

They claim to have been in business since 1979, but a google-search returns no results, the website seems to be new, lacks a title and looks quite unprofessional (one page with lots of text, no menue). The domain was registred only one month ago and is owned by Sally Austin.

>> continue to Corporate Anthropology Center

Has anybody heard of the "Corporate Anthropology Center"? "The Global Hub for Cultural Business Anthropology"? They offer "Training and Certification - Consumer Research and Database - IntraCorporate Services - Competition Analysis" etc (extremly business-like rhetoric!).

They claim to have been…

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Christopher Kaplonski’s website on Anthropology of Mongolia

You can download several articles and papers on Anthropology of Mongolia on Christopher Kaplonski’s website. He is currently doing research on concepts of democracy in Mongolia and political Violence and its legacy.

He writes:

Among other things, I have looked at how different political parties confronted the issue of rehabilitation and compensation for the victims of political repression. Exactly who is a victim and who is not a victim raises important questions about identity and politics. Given the importance of this category to work on human rights, reconciliation, truth commissions and memory studies, it intrigues and puzzles me that it has been left almost completely unexamined in existing research. I thus see an integral part of this larger project on political violence being the problematization of the label of “victim.”

(…)

It is very interesting and important to me that any discussion of the concept of democracy that I’ve read in Mongolian explains the concept in terms of its Greek origins and Western theories. As an anthropologist, I’m pretty convinced that this is not the most useful approach. Rather, I think it is important not to just to look at how people respond to surveys, or understand European and American political theory but how they actually talk and act in different situations. My current thinking is that in many ways, the textbook definition of democracy is irrelevant in the daily life of people. People seem to be thinking of democracy as a form of ‘anti-socialism.’

>> read more on his website

The layout is clean and friendly, but the navigation is quite confusing. Here some shortcuts:

>> conference papers to download

>> more articles to download

>> section about Mongolia incl lots of pictures

>> his general section on anthropology, fieldwork and data-analysis

You can download several articles and papers on Anthropology of Mongolia on Christopher Kaplonski's website. He is currently doing research on concepts of democracy in Mongolia and political Violence and its legacy.

He writes:

Among other things, I have looked…

Read more