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Schluss mit der Funkstille

Ein Jahr lang keine neue Beiträge auf diesem Blog. Wer ab und zu auf dem englisch sprachigen Blog auf antropologi.info vorbeischaut, weiss, was mir ergangen ist. Ein neues Leben als verheirateter Mann habe ich angefangen! In Kairo, sechs Flugstunden von meiner anderen Heimat Oslo. Ursprünglich wollte ich nur einen Sommer in der ägyptischen Hauptstadt bleiben, nun habe ich hier geheiratet und ich, eigentlich ein Nomade, bin hier anscheinend sesshaft geworden.

Antropologi.info möchte ich nicht eingehen lassen, obwohl ich gelernt habe, dass in meinem neuen Leben noch weniger Überschuss für solche Aktivitäten vorhanden ist – nicht zuletzt aus finanziellen Gründen.

Mich freut es daher, dass trotz der Funkstille noch Mails an mich geschrieben werden und neue Anmeldungen an den Newsletter (bislang nur auf norwegisch) eingehen. Ein Email mit einem schönen Text, der mich vor wenigen Tage erreichte, möchte ich Anlass nehmen, Schluss mit der Funstille zu machen. Viel Spass beim Lesen etwas später heute abend!

Ein Jahr lang keine neue Beiträge auf diesem Blog. Wer ab und zu auf dem englisch sprachigen Blog auf antropologi.info vorbeischaut, weiss, was mir ergangen ist. Ein neues Leben als verheirateter Mann habe ich angefangen! In Kairo, sechs Flugstunden von…

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Wrapping it up, or new beginnings

I was reminded of my blog again recently when an editor from Popular Anthropology Magazine asked me to write a short article on my experience of blogging from fieldwork. Her questions made me miss the time I was blogging regularly:

For example, what are some of the challenges and rewards of blogging during fieldwork? Are there any special precautions you need to take in order to maintain the anonymity of research participants? Have any of your research participants read your blog? How does blogging impact the accessibility of anthropological research? What does blogging reveal about fieldwork that may become lost in other publications? How do you transition from blogging to writing up?

I’ll link to the article when it appears in the magazine in June. While writing the article, I became so inspired that I set up a new blog Cicilie’s city blog (Cicilies byblogg) where I consider blogging from my recent project. Now the only challenge is to find time… between feeding the 6 months old and playing with the 4 years old and all the rest.

Another thing that has happened in this project since the last time I updated this blog, is that the radio clip I wrote about previously was aired again. It lead to a request from a support group from people with psychological problems and another from a library to hold a speech. I’m working on the latter now and have titled the lecture Therapy and democracy at the bar: Slam poetry in Paris. It was fun to write in Norwegian about slam poetry again, and I’ll see if it’s possible to transform the lecture into an article of some kind. I desperately need to publish…

Apropos this desperate need: The first I got on with after the birth of my second son was an application for a postdoc. I thought my head was pretty fit for starting working again, particularly since I had so much time on my hands to just sit thinking about things for a long time (seeing Little Fatty Pear just get fatter and fatter). When I received the evaluation I realised that I must have been a bit out of my mind at the time, as I had proposed to write nine articles and two books during a two years long postdoc period. Now, I’ve sent a new application, for a 3 years long position this time, and with the aim to write only 4-5 articles and a book, all from the slam scene inspired by my other research: The stage is all the world, and the players are mere men and women: Parisian performance poetry and other stories from Relational Europe… We’ll see. In a few months time, it seems I’ll have not much more to do than to look after Little Fatty Pear and write.

But for the moment, it’s not Parisian slam poetry that counts, but suburban libraries and urban morphology, but that’s – hopefully – food for another blog coming up very soon.

Ops, there I almost forgot the nice little interview (in Norwegian) at Foreningen !Les (“Read”): In the field with poetry slam

I was reminded of my blog again recently when an editor from Popular Anthropology Magazine asked me to write a short article on my experience of blogging from fieldwork. Her questions made me miss the time I was blogging regularly:…

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How scholars in the Middle East developed anthropology more than 1000 years ago

Anthropology emerged in a relatively high scientific level in the wider Middle East before it existed as a discipline in the West. Therefore, the label of colonialism often coupled to its emergence must be removed.

This is the main point of an article by Hassen Chaabani in the recent issue of the International Journal of Modern Anthropology.

Although the beginning of the development of anthropology as a discipline is originated in colonial encounter between Western people and colonized peoples and, therefore, coupled to its use in favor of extremist ideologies such as racism, this must not diminish the scientific value of anthropology, he writes.

You won't find many anthropology departments at universities in the Middle East, and its reputation might not be the best. So therefore this article mind be a timely reminder that anthropology has not been a dubious invention by the West. Chaabani sees "the prestige and hegemony of some editors and publishers in some powerful countries" as "one of the factors that could inhibit the development of a real global anthropology".

Hassen Chaabani, who is is president of the Tunisian Anthropological Association, draws our attention to two scholars: Abu Rayhan al- Biruni, a Persian scholar (973-1048) and Ibn Khaldoun, a Tunisian scholar (1332-1406).

Abu Rayhan al-Biruni, he writes, "is considered as one of the greatest scientists not only of the 11th century but of all times". He is most commonly known as a mathematician, astrologer, and historian. But he has also been an anthropologist:

He founded the science of anthropology before anthropology existed as a discipline, and therefore he is considered as the first anthropologist. He was an impartial writer on custom and creeds of various nations and was the first Muslim scholar to study Indian populations and their traditions. In addition he wrote detailed comparative studies on the anthropology of religions and cultures in the Middle East, Mediterranean and especially South Asia. (…)

Living during the high period of Islamic cultural and scientific achievements, Al-Biruni placed a focus on modern anthropological interests including caste, the class system, rites and customs, cultural practice, and women’s issues (Akbar, 2009). Through this modern practice, Al-Biruni used the concepts of cross cultural comparison, inter-cultural dialogue and phenomenological observation which have become commonplace within anthropology today (Ataman K., 2005).

Biruni's tradition of comparative cross-cultural study continued in the "Muslim world" through to Ibn Khaldoun’s work in the 14th century, Chaabani writes:

Some of his books cover the history of mankind up to his time and others cover the history of Berber peoples, natives of North Africa, which remain invaluable to present day historians, as they are based on Ibn Khaldūn's personal knowledge of the Berbers. In fact, he presented a deep anthropological study of Berbers before anthropology existed as a discipline.

Chaabani also writes that the general idea of biological evolution was advanced more than 1,000 years before Darwin by the Iraqi thinker Amr ibn Bahr Al Jahis (800-868) in his book "Book of Animals".

> > read the whole article (pdf)

Who was the first anthropologist? Really al-Biruni? A tricky question. Others might point to Classical Greece and Classical Rome, see more in Wikipedia: History of Anthropology (where al-Biruni is mentoned as well). The main point as I see it is that anthropology was developed in many parts of the world, and not only in the so-called West.

SEE ALSO:

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"Take care of the different national traditions of anthropology"

The resurgence of African anthropology

The dubious behaviour of Western researchers sightseeing the “Arab Spring”

“No wonder that anthropology is banished from universities in the ‘decolonized’ world”

How racist is American anthropology?

Minority scholars treated as second class academics: Still a racial bias in anthropology

Jack Goody: "The West has never been superior"

The Five Major Challenges for Anthropology

Anthropology emerged in a relatively high scientific level in the wider Middle East before it existed as a discipline in the West. Therefore, the label of colonialism often coupled to its emergence must be removed.

This is the main point of…

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Now I am a truly engaged anthropologist!

I wanted to write this post long time ago. As you might have noticed, there haven’t been any new posts on this blog since the 24th of October last year.

So what has happened?

Well, at about the same time I wrote my last blog post, the most wonderful woman entered my life. Two months later we already got engaged. And in a few months, I hope, we will get married.

So yes, now I am a truly engaged anthropologist! !

Getting married in Egypt is for me a wonderful, but not actually a cheap endeavour. My economic situation forces me therefore to focus on my paid job at the University in Oslo. Nevertheless, I hope there will be some time for blogging and developing the website soon. I really miss it and I’d like to start up again!

In the meantime you can have a look at the website of the new research project by anthropologist Thomas Hylland Eriksen that I am currently working for. It’s called Overheating. The three crises of globalisation.

Here is some of the stuff I’ve written there:

I wanted to write this post long time ago. As you might have noticed, there haven’t been any new posts on this blog since the 24th of October last year.

So what has happened?

Well, at about the same time I wrote…

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Nye DUO – bedre tilgang til antropologi-oppgaver?

Universitetsbiblioteket i Oslo har relansert sitt vitenarkiv DUO der både studenter og forskere kan publisere alt fra papers til masteroppgaver, phd-avhandlinger og bøker.

De har gått over til en ny platform som blir brukt av mange Open Access tidsskrifter verden over og andre digitale arkiv i Norge (DSpace). Lenkene fra gamle DUO fungerer heldigvis fortsatt!

Den nye oversikten over publikasjonene i sosialantropologi finner vi her. OBS: Klikker man på sosialantropologi får vi opp ikke noe resultat (“Det finnes ingen innførsler som passer denne visningen”). Vi får det vi er ute etter når vi klikker på Sosialantropologisk institutt. (Men sorter etter publikasjonsdato eller utgivelsesdato ser ikke ut til å fungere alltid slik det skal)

Her er det mye nytt og interessant, for eksempel en oppgave om Minoritetsmøte med det offentlige på Holmlia ( av Adam Olabi) til hvordan døve utfordrer hva som er normalt (av Jenny Frogner), en studie av en Steinerbarnehage i Norge og et kosmopolitisk teater i Burkina Faso (av Vilde Straume Wiig).

Nye DUO ble lansert i samband med internasjonale Open Access Week. Meningen med uka er å sørge for at flere vitenskapelige publikasjoner blir åpen tilgjengelig for allmenheten. UB arrangerte til og med et seminar. Se dekningen i Uniforum, bl.a. Ber fleire forskarar publisera i opne kanalar og – Biblioteka må overføra pengar til forskingsmiljøa.

Hele seminaret kan vi se på nett!

SE OGSÅ:

Tromsø-forskning blir fritt tilgjengelig for hele verden

Forskere boikotter forlagene, vil ha gratis tilgang til forskning på nett

Oversikt over internasjonale viten-arkiv

Universitetsbiblioteket i Oslo har relansert sitt vitenarkiv DUO der både studenter og forskere kan publisere alt fra papers til masteroppgaver, phd-avhandlinger og bøker.

De har gått over til en ny platform som blir brukt av mange Open Access tidsskrifter verden over…

Read more