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"Dreamtime" no longer an acceptable term

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The West Australian and South Australian education departments have made lists of appropriate and inappropriate words to describe Aboriginal people and culture, The Australian reports.

Dreamtime is no longer an acceptable term to describe the collection of Aboriginal creation stories, and should be referred to as The Dreaming or The Dreamings.

– The structure of traditional Aboriginal society should not be described as primitive – but as complex and diverse

– The term native should be replaced by indigenous groups or language groups.

– Instead of saying myths and legends, teachers should say Dreaming stories, teaching from The Dreaming or creation stories.

– Aborigine should not be replaced by the term Aboriginal person.

Rituals should be called ceremonies

religion should be avoided in favour of spirituality

tribal should be shunned for traditional.

tribe should be replaced by Aboriginal people,

horde should be replaced by language groups

– instead of clan the term family groups should be used

The list of terms was developed with input from a wide variety of sources, including departmental staff, Aboriginal organisations and academics.

>> read the whole story in The Australian

>> Download “Aboriginal Education for all Learners in South Australia” including the section on sensitive terms and issues (pdf)

SEE ALSO:

Anthropologists condemn the use of terms of “stone age” and “primitive”

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The West Australian and South Australian education departments have made lists of appropriate and inappropriate words to describe Aboriginal people and culture, The Australian reports.

- Dreamtime is no longer an acceptable term to describe the collection of Aboriginal creation stories,…

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Forsker på synske dansker

De kan enten se, høre eller føle avdøde personer, ånder eller energier fra ”den andre siden”. Antropolog Vibeke Steffen har vært på feltarbeid blant dem. Hun er nemlig midt i forskningsprosjektet Ånder og parapsykologiske fenomener – om synskhet i Danmark, melder forskning.no.

Steffen har hittil snakket med 14 medier fra 30 til 65 år. Felles for dem er at de ble rammet av et alvorlig tap, har en historie med spesielle opplevelser eller bare en fornemmelse av at sansene deres var annerledes:

– De fleste forteller at de som barn så nisser, ånder eller spøkelser, som de trodde at alle mennesker kunne se. Enkelte har forutsett begivenheter. En person drømte at presten ville bli skilt. En annen var ute og reiste, og drømte at hesten deres døde.

– De har en forestilling om at de har fått evnen, er født med den eller at en opplevelse ga dem evnen. En mistet en bestefar som overførte noen evner. Så går de ut og utforsker evnene, og langsomt blir de overbevist.

Antropologen ble forundret over effekten av en seanse:

– Jeg ble veldig overrasket over hvor mye mening det gir når man er der – uansett om det foregår i Daniel-kirken eller på et home party med fem kritiske kvinnelige forskere, som jeg selv har prøvd.

– Hvis man endrer rammene rundt seg, kan alt skje. Det er nok det samme som når man går i kirken på søndagen eller begynner å studere eller går på fotballkamp eller ser på tv-serien X Factor. Man trer inn i en verden hvor alt kan skje. Det er det samme universet som reklame alltid spiller på, fordi det virker.

>> les hele saken på forskning.no (eller originalen på videnskab.dk)

SE OGSÅ:

For mer forskning på “det esoteriske”

Forsket på hvorfor markedet for healing vokser

– Märthas tro på engler er ikke ekstrem

– Moderne arbeidsliv er preget av new age

Antropolog: “På børsen driver en med magi og ritualer”

Magi og trolldom i Hallingdal: Pass deg for Haugafolket!

De kan enten se, høre eller føle avdøde personer, ånder eller energier fra ”den andre siden”. Antropolog Vibeke Steffen har vært på feltarbeid blant dem. Hun er nemlig midt i forskningsprosjektet Ånder og parapsykologiske fenomener – om synskhet i Danmark,…

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The resurgence of African anthropology

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What is the state of anthropology at African universities? African anthropology is interdisciplinary and focuses on solving problems like poverty, diseases and violence, Paul Nchoji Nkwi writes in the book World Anthropologies (download the book):

The West invented anthropology to study the “Other” and it defined the canons. But in developing economies, where resources are scarce, science has to be either useful or be gone.

In his very interesting text that is available online (Word-document), he describes the recent developments of our discipline in Africa and calls for a better cooperation between anthropologists in Africa with anthropologists in other parts of the world:

The European and American traditions of the discipline are distinct and the discipline surely deserves an African twist as well. It is time for the social sciences, including anthropology, across Africa to regroup and to face the challenges that confront us as a continent and as part of the human family: Disease, hunger, HIV/AIDS, ethnic wars, poverty … We need to look for answers to these scourges. It will be salutary for Africans to bring their own particular perspectives to all the social sciences, including anthropology

It is the applied option that dominates anthropology in Africa. Applied anthropology as the focus of academic work rehabilitated the discipline that has been discredited in post-colonial Africa because of its history as the handmaiden of colonialism:

African anthropologists grew up in societies that were either colonized or recently decolonized. Westerners initially controlled the production of anthropological knowledge and the result was functionalist studies. These studies were explicitly ahistorical and often myopic about colonialism. After the colonial period, the new nations of Africa dismissed anthropology both as a cultivation of primitivism and as an apologetic for colonialism.

Throughout the 1960s and 1970s African and Africanist anthropologists found it difficult to practice their profession openly, Paul Nchoji Nkwi writes. Anthropology took cover within African Studies programs, or anthropology institutes disappeared into sociology departments.

Some African anthropologists like Kwesi Prah (papers), Godwin Nukunya, Harris Memel-Fotê and Théophile Obenga, remained in Africa, while others like Adam Kuper, John Comaroff and Brian du Toit, Archie Mafeje, and Maxwell Owusu, left their countries “in search of more conducive environments”.

But by the 1980s, there was more and more demand for anthropological knowledge – mainly regarding development projects. Many projects had failed due to their top-down approach. A perspective from below was needed – an anthropological perspective. Also, a shift from hospital-centered to people-centered health care gave medical anthropologists a window of opportunity.

In 1987, the Pan African Anthropological Association (PAAA) was established. This was another event in the late 1980s and early 1990s that helped integrate anthropology into the discourse of development in Africa.

Anthropology, Paul Nchoji Nkwi writes, had to rediscover itself as a discipline that could help to solve problems:

During the first PAAA conference in 1989, many participants argued that addressing important human issues, such as the need for health care, the spread of famine, rapid population growth, environmental degradation, discrimination and violence against women, poverty, and ethnic violence would enhance the discipline’s tarnished image.
(…)
Since 1989, the PAAA has organized twelve annual conferences and a series of training workshops for junior anthropologists. The association has also worked hard to bring the discipline closer to other social sciences. The future of anthropology depends, we feel, on how well the discipline integrates with the other social sciences. For anthropology to attract funds it must take on, and bring a unique perspective to, research problems that are common to other social sciences.
(…)
Over the years, African anthropologists have worked closely with environmental biologists, organic chemists, economists, demographers, health providers, and others. This experience showed that multi-disciplinary work is mutually enriching since each discipline draws on its unique insights to attain a common goal.

At the University of Yaoundé, there were 525 students majoring in anthropology in the 2002-2003 academic year, the same number of students took it as their minor. Paul Nchoji Nkwi witnessed an “increased involvement of the social sciences in health, agriculture, animal, environmental, and population research programs funded by the government”:

Targeting critical areas such as general health, reproductive health, population growth, the environment, and agricultural development led to the design of courses in medical anthropology, development anthropology, and environmental impact assessment. Today, the University of Yaoundé-I has one of the most active and dynamic departments of anthropology in Central Africa, attracting students from the entire region.

African anthropologists want opportunities to work and earn their way – in partnership with their colleagues all over the world, he stresses:

To bring this about requires a series of small but doable changes in the formal academic training programs, grant administration procedures, and grant requirements to promote better partnership arrangements.
(…)
Strengthening the ability of Africans to organize and develop their own professional associations is a way to address all of these issues at once. Truly professional associations will link Northern and African anthropologists in a single intellectual, publishing, and teaching endeavor on a more equal footing.

>> read the whole text “Anthropology in a Post-Colonial Africa – The Survival Debate” by Paul Nchoji Nkwi (Word-document)

SOME LINKS RELATED TO AFRICAN ANTHROPOLOGY:

Pan African Anthropological Association (PAAA) (no updates since 2005!)

African Anthropologist (Journal of the Pan African Anthropological Association)

Etho-Net Africa (the new website of this network is no longer available)

African e-Journals Project

Nordic Journal of African Studies

African Studies Quarterly

African Journal on Conflict Resolution

JENdA: A Journal of Culture and African Women Studies

Afrikanistik online

Africa Writes

SEE ALSO:

How can we create a more plural anthropological community?

Book and papers online: Working towards a global community of anthropologists

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What is the state of anthropology at African universities? African anthropology is interdisciplinary and focuses on solving problems like poverty, diseases and violence, Paul Nchoji Nkwi writes in the book World Anthropologies (download the book):

The West invented anthropology to…

Read more

Utstilling: De indfødte (Copenhagen)

23. februar – 12. maj 2008, København

Charlotte Haslund-Christensen tager udgangspunkt i den vestlige opdagelsesrejsendes blik på “den anden”, men vender objektivet mod os selv: danskerne. Udstillingen er en fotografisk installation af de indfødte.

Mer informasjon

23. februar - 12. maj 2008, København

Charlotte Haslund-Christensen tager udgangspunkt i den vestlige opdagelsesrejsendes blik på "den anden", men vender objektivet mod os selv: danskerne. Udstillingen er en fotografisk installation af de indfødte.

Mer informasjon

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New Cultures of Intimacy and Togetherness in Asia (Delhi)

New Delhi, India, May 9-10, 2008

This conference seeks to bring together scholars working across areas such as sociology, gender studies, film/media studies, anthropology, popular culture, and urban studies in order to explore emerging cultures of intimacy and friendship in contemporary non-Western contexts.

We are particularly interested in perspectives that relate the topic to the making of social selves at a time great economic and cultural change in many Asian societies. Socially, ‘non-Western’ has often been considered synonymous with traditional, conservative, static and illiberal, particularly in contexts of intimate/personal relationships that are expected to conform to certain values, norms and expectations of heritage.

However, following modernity at large and specific influxes of change like economic liberalization, globalization and the worldwide web, there is, increasingly, a perception (if not a belief) that social structures and networks have been affected, and “new” cultures of intimacy and togetherness are emergent (if not already established). There is a decided conviction that such new structures and networks are visible in day-to-day contexts at work, home and leisure, and that they reflect political, cultural, emotional and intellectual transitions and upheavals.

At this conference, we would like to explore this notion of emergent cultures of “new” intimacies and togetherness in the contemporary non-Western world, in as varied a social and cultural register as possible.

Inquiries and expressions of interest to: intimaciesconference (AT) yahoo.com

Brinda Bose, Nehru Memorial Museum and Library, New Delhi, India
Sanjay Srivastava, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia

New Delhi, India, May 9-10, 2008

This conference seeks to bring together scholars working across areas such as sociology, gender studies, film/media studies, anthropology, popular culture, and urban studies in order to explore emerging cultures of intimacy and friendship in contemporary…

Read more