search expand

Feiret Buddha fødselsdag / Flere og flere nordmenn konverterer til buddhismen

Aftenposten

Flere tusen buddhister i Oslo og Akershus samlet seg for å markere den viktigste av de buddhistiske høytidene. – Det er som jul og påske på én gang, sier Egil Lothe, leder i Buddhistforbundet. – Vi markerer Buddhas fødselsdag (Vesak-feiringen), og dette er den viktigste dagen for buddhister.

Buddhistforbundet har over 1000 medlemmer som er etnisk norske og som har konvertert til buddhismen. – Det blir stadig flere. Buddhismens verdier, som toleranse og det å finne rikdommen i det enkle liv, slår an, mener Lothe. >> les mer (link oppdatert)

Aftenposten

Flere tusen buddhister i Oslo og Akershus samlet seg for å markere den viktigste av de buddhistiske høytidene. - Det er som jul og påske på én gang, sier Egil Lothe, leder i Buddhistforbundet. - Vi markerer Buddhas fødselsdag (Vesak-feiringen),…

Read more

New articles on AnthroGlobe: Western Cybermythology / People of the open sea

Signs of activity at AnthroGlobe – one of the eldest anthropology web journals. Two new texts and they seem to work with the site layout, it seems:

Carmen Petrosian-Husa: Powerful & Powerless: The Rei Metau on the Outer Islands of Yap

Since 1982 I visited the islands of the rei metau several times. My main focus of research were the “rites de passage”, weaving, structures of authority and medicine. In due course of my research I visited all their islands and atolls and analyzed the differences in the social structures of each single atoll. The way I will describe the rei metau in this paper represents the lives and self-esteem of the people as it can be experienced today. >> continue

Darrell A. Joyce: Modern Folklore: Cybermythology in Western Culture

Throughout the years, humans have used the oral tradition of folklore and legend to share stories, entertain, and to teach moral social lessons. The purpose of this paper is to briefly look at the evolution of urban legends from their “beginnings” in the turn of the 20 th century to present day, with specific attention to contemporary urban legends, and the application of internet/e-mail communications as a medium to further spread this modern form of folklore. Also, this paper attempts to answer the question of whether or not folklore continues to exist and be propagated in today’s society. >> continue

Signs of activity at AnthroGlobe - one of the eldest anthropology web journals. Two new texts and they seem to work with the site layout, it seems:

Carmen Petrosian-Husa: Powerful & Powerless: The Rei Metau on the Outer Islands of Yap

Since…

Read more

Die SZ und die Ureinwohner: Gestrandet im vorsintflutlichen Evolutionismus

(via Ethno::log) Ein haarstraeubender Artikel ist in der SZ zu lesen. Ueber die Ureinwohner auf den Andaman-Inseln, die wir von der Tsunami-Katastrofe kennen. Der Text ist ein gutes Beispiel dafuer, wie weitverbreitet die vergessen geglaubte evolutionismustische Weltsicht noch ist: Wir, der sogenannte moderne Westen steht auf der Spitze der Entwicklungspyramide. Ureinwohner repraesentieren nach dieser Sichtweise den Urzustand der Menschheit. Man bezeichnet sie als “Steinzeitmenschen”, vergleicht sie mit Tieren, bringt sie in Reservate unter.

Originalzitat aus dem Text:

Der Kameramann sagt: „Da sind sie.“ Wie aufgescheuchte Tiere rennen nackte Menschen hin und her, schieben Auslegerboote ins Wasser. Um ihre Bäuche gelbe Matten, in ihren Händen Speere.

Daher wird ein Naturschuetzer zitiert, der sich nun um die Ureinwohner kuemmert:

„Wenn man die Tiger vor der Ausrottung retten kann, kann man jeden retten. Wir haben hier keine großen Katzen. Unsere großen Katzen sind die Ureinwohner.“

Ein wirklich richtig uebler Text, geschrieben wie vor hundert Jahren, der daran erinnert, dass genau diese Art von ethnozentrischem Evolutionismus, der die Menschen in Ueber- und Unterlegene einteilt, die Grundlage von Fremdenfeindlichkeit, Nationalismus und Rassismus bildet.

>> zum Text “Ureinwohner. Gestrandet in der Vergangenheit (Link aktualisiert)

MEHR ZUM THEMA:
Ten Little Niggers: Tsunami, tribal circus and racism
“Stone Age Tribes”, tsunami and racist evolutionism

(via Ethno::log) Ein haarstraeubender Artikel ist in der SZ zu lesen. Ueber die Ureinwohner auf den Andaman-Inseln, die wir von der Tsunami-Katastrofe kennen. Der Text ist ein gutes Beispiel dafuer, wie weitverbreitet die vergessen geglaubte evolutionismustische Weltsicht noch ist: Wir,…

Read more

Culture and Environment – New issue of Pro Ethnologica is online

Pro Ethnologica (published by the Estonian Eesti Rahva Muuseumi in Tartu) is one of the few anthropology Open Access journals. Their recent volume is dated back in December 2004 but the articles haven’t been onliner until now – probably due to copyright issues as Pille Runnel explained in an email to me. Runnell confirmed: “Pro Ethnologia is still an open access journal”.

From the editorial:

The texts illustrate the fuzzy quality and interdisciplinary nature of the debate in the broad tradition of ecological anthropology. This situation is represented in this volume by the fact that the articles are written by ethnologists, folklorists, and human geographers who share the same concern for human beings relation to the environment although the interpretations are different.

>> continue (pdf)

>> to Pro Ethnologica 18: Culture and Environment

Pro Ethnologica (published by the Estonian Eesti Rahva Muuseumi in Tartu) is one of the few anthropology Open Access journals. Their recent volume is dated back in December 2004 but the articles haven't been onliner until now - probably due…

Read more

Office Culture – good overview about corporate anthropology in FinancialTimes

I’ve collected lots of articles on Corporate Anthropology but maybe this one here in the Financal Times, written by an anthrologist (Gillian Tett)who has “tried to incorporate what I learnt about “people watching” into financial journalism”, can be used as the standard introductory text as it provides lots of examples of anthropologists in the business field.

Among others, she interviews Simon Robert, who many of us know from his blog at Ideas Bazaar. For his PhD, Robert had investigated the impact of satellite TV on households in an Indian city and on how they looked on the world (see Ideas Bazaar’s website for some of his papers)

He explains how he is studying the Office culture at the company Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC):

“Studying PwC is like looking at a town – you try to see how the bits all interact, and you are looking for patterns,” he says. “What we try to do is describe what is happening, but we don’t present solutions. We let the company decide that.”

The article starts explaining that anthropologists ask unusual questions based on their unusual knowledge they gather via their unusual method – participant observation. Anthropologists “translate” as they have alwas done:

““Many companies assume that if they want to have a global website, say, all they have to do is translate it into different languages,” explains Martin Ortlieb, an anthropologist who now works at a global software group. “But that isn’t true – what works in German can’t just be translated into Japanese with the same effect.”

Here is a good explanation of the anthropologists’ different way of asking questions. Anne Kirah, who was hired by Boeing to study passenger behaviour on flights, and is now the senior design anthropologist at Microsoft, is interviewed:

“Kirah does not ask much about technology per se – let alone about how people might use computers. But that is the whole point – and part of the defining nature of anthropology. A normal marketing person might approach a family with a barrage of highly directed questions about computers. But that way, Kirah argues, they are likely to just get the answers they expect to hear – and will only offer the consumers products that the software designers have already created. The anthropologist starts by observing everyday life, with all its odd little patterns, and then tries to work out how computers might eventually fit into that. Microsoft’s hope is that this will inspire entirely new applications for technology.

But I doubt everyone agress with Kirah here when she says:
“Yes, there have been periods in history when anthropologists have been abused by governments… but as long as I believe that I am helping the voice of the consumer to be heard, I am happy to do my job at Microsoft.” >> continue

SEE ALSO:
The article was already commented by Anne Galloway, Dina Mehta and Alexandra Mack (another blogging anthropologist!!)

I've collected lots of articles on Corporate Anthropology but maybe this one here in the Financal Times, written by an anthrologist (Gillian Tett)who has "tried to incorporate what I learnt about “people watching” into financial journalism", can be used as…

Read more