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– Muslimske friskoler er bedre enn folkeskolen

Elever fra muslimske friskoler får bedre karakterer enn folkeskoleelever. Selv om karaktermålingen er omstridt, mener antropolog Annette Ihle at de muslimske friskolene er flinkere i å integrere muslimske barn enn folkeskolen. “De ser dem ikke primært som problembørn, men som børn, der kan lære noget. Accepten af børnenes kultur betyder også meget. Her diskuterer man ikke tørklæder eller andre forskelle”, sier hun i et intervju med LOs Ugebrev.

Antropologen har tidligere vært på feltarbeid i tre muslimske friskoler i Danmark.

“Man opdrages vel ikke optimalt til deltagelse i et moderne, demokratisk samfund af langskæggede mænd med koranen i hånden?” spør intervjueren. Antropologen svarer:

»Vi taler ikke om koranskoler, som svarer til vores søndagsskoler. Vi taler om skoler, der er underlagt friskoleloven og tilsyn. Og om lærere, hvoraf nok halvdelen er danske med en lang friskolebaggrund bag sig. Gennemgående meget kvalificerede lærere med bred pædagogisk interesse og viden. Religionen spiller en forholdsvis tilbagetrukken rolle, for den er man færdig med at diskutere.«

>> les hele saken i LOs Ugebrev

Til Kristeligt Dagblad sier Annette Haaber Ihle at hun er “stærkt kritisk over for at vurdere skolerne ud fra karakterlister”:

– Mit indtryk er, at skolerne især lægger vægt på hardcore faglighed, og at de på meget forskellig vis håndterer det, som ifølge loven er deres hovedopgave: At oplære eleverne til medborgere i et samfund med frihed og folkestyre.

>> les hele saken i Kristeligt Dagblad

SE OGSÅ:

Doktoravhandling: Forskjellene mellom offentlige og muslimske skoler er overdrevet

– Elever fra muslimske friskoler klarer seg best

“Muslimske friskoler er for autoritære”

Doktoravhandling: Skolen skaper skiller

Doktoravhandling: “Å skape den normale eleven”

Innvandrerelever stemples som dumme – Ny bok om etnisk mangfold i skolen

-Innvandrere mer ambisiøse studenter

Minoritetsungdom er høyt motiverte for å ta utdanning

Elever fra muslimske friskoler får bedre karakterer enn folkeskoleelever. Selv om karaktermålingen er omstridt, mener antropolog Annette Ihle at de muslimske friskolene er flinkere i å integrere muslimske barn enn folkeskolen. "De ser dem ikke primært som problembørn, men som…

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Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth has started blogging

Not even more and more anthropologists are blogging. Now, even anthropology organisations have discovered the internet. A few days ago, ASA (Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth) has launched their blog “aimed at providing a new platform for anthropological discusion”. Their first guest blogger is Alberto Corsin Jimenez of the University of Manchester.

>> visit the ASA blog

PS: More updates soon

Not even more and more anthropologists are blogging. Now, even anthropology organisations have discovered the internet. A few days ago, ASA (Association of Social Anthropologists of the UK and Commonwealth) has launched their blog "aimed at providing a new platform…

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Now open access to 39 years of the journal Folklore Forum

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Folklore Forum, a journal that is produced by graduate students at the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Department of Indiana University, has gone Open Access. From now on, 39 years of scholarship, debate, and exchange of ideas are freely accessible for everybody in the freshly digitized archives of Folklore Forum.

Their most recent volum focuses on Folklore and the Internet and includes articles on urban legends that circulate in chain letter-form as anonymous emails, and on icons and avatars as cyberart and examples of the development of folkloric art forms online.

Folklore has has always had an ambivalent relationship with mass media, Editor-in-Chief Curtis Ashton writes in the editorial:

Salvage ethnography to recover oral texts would be unnecessary if print were not invading 19th century Europe and America and depriving the Folk of their lore. (…) Though the trend has been shifting in professional meetings and journal publications, folklorists do tend to avoid the world of computers as a field for enquiry, either because of a lack of technical training or just a lack of general interest.

But as this volume demonstrates, the web has much to offer for folklorists:

I encourage our readers to consider how we use the Internet in our work as folklorists, as a object of study in an of itself, with its own discourse of traditional motifs; as a field for ethnographic research into the virtual, networked community; as a means for scholarly communication and publication; as a storage facility for the digitally compressed knowledge of the past; as a presentation space for the mutual benefit of both ethnographer and informant; as a means for reflection, rethinking how we do our work, what draws us to it, and why.

>> visit Folklore Forum

As a sidenote: In the most recent entry here on antropologi.info I wrote about how folkore can enrich anthropology, see “Take care of the different national traditions of anthropology”

SEE ALSO:

Now online: Up to 100 year old anthropology papers

2006 – The Year of Open Access Anthropology?

antropologi.info survey: Six anthropologists on Anthropology and Internet

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Folklore Forum, a journal that is produced by graduate students at the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Department of Indiana University, has gone Open Access. From now on, 39 years of scholarship, debate, and exchange of ideas are freely accessible for everybody…

Read more

“Take care of the different national traditions of anthropology”

In attempts to globalize anthropology, it is a good thing to translate into Chinese textbooks such as William Haviland’s Anthropology, but it is also desirable to hold on to what is distinctive in local disciplinary history, Chris Hann suggests in Anthropology Today (December 2007).

“It would be a shame if the evolved expertise concerning local minorities were to be undermined in the aftermath of this exposure to global debates”, he writes and calls for a “reconciliation of anthropologies” and more interdisciplinarity.

Although anthropologists discuss similar topics at large conferences in Europe and the US, there do exist many different national traditions within anthropology.

In many countries (for example in Germany) there is a distinction between the study of “ones own culture” (Volkskunde – national ethnology) and those who study variation on a global level (Völkerkunde – cultural anthropology). And in Eastern Europe, social anthropology hardly does exist – the focus is mainly national ethnography. In China (as in many other places) anthropology at home is widely understood to refer primarily to the study of indigenous minorities.

While it might be obvious that national ethnology has much to learn from social anthropology (broader perspective), the same is true the other way round: Social anthropology als needs the more maginalized traditions of national ethnology or even folklore, Hann argues:

According to a caricature that still seems widespread, while the West refined anthropology into a rigorous comparative social science, and later into hermeneutic deconstruction on a global scale, the East produced only descriptive collectors of local butterflies. If there was ever some truth in such stereotypes, they hardly hold today, at any rate to judge from the work on Eastern Europe that comes my way.

Many ethnographers and folklorists nowadays range far outside their traditional territory and draw on the same bodies of theory as their Western counterparts in socio-cultural anthropology. Meanwhile, few of the latter nowadays aspire to rigorous comparison in the manner of a positivistic social science, and many engage very seriously with the historical record. In short, there is a lot of diversity in both camps and also a significant degree of convergence between them.

But to the extent that the national ethnographers retain some intellectual roots in the study of the traditions and customs of their country, it seems to me that this element could potentially enrich teaching and research in ‘general anthropology’, complementing the interests of those colleagues who develop other regional interests and who work in fields not covered at all in the national canon.

Such a combination of local and cosmopolitan interests, a confluence of the Volkskunde and Völkerkunde streams, could lead to a more balanced discipline, one which is neither the celebration of one’s own people nor the exoticization of ‘the Other’. It is a question of ‘overcoming the definitional straitjacket… which wedged anthropology between nationalism and primitivism’, to quote the recent words of João de Pina-Cabral (2006: 665).

This divison of labour has historic origins and is particularly striking in Germany:

In Germany, where I have been living and working for the last decade, one contrast is particularly striking. Here the distinction distinction between those who studied ‘primitives’ in the colonies and those who studied the Volk at home was institutionalized in the 19th century, and it persists to the present day. Völkerkunde (nowadays more commonly termed Ethnologie) was a discipline whose record of achievement compares well with that of comparative social anthropology in Britain and France in the generations preceding the Nazi catastrophe (Gingrich 2005).

Volkskunde, the home variant, was even more seriously compromised under National Socialism. However, under names such as ‘European ethnology’ or ‘empirical cultural studies’, it has survived. It is to these departments that the student wishing to carry out a project in Germany or elsewhere in Europe is expected to turn. The established departments of Völkerkunde for the most part view such projects as an unwelcome contamination of their discipline, even if the theories and research methods proposed are one and the same.

Thus, while Mediterranean specialists could make a substantial impact on social anthropology in Britain in the second half of the last century, they have been largely excluded from Völkerkunde. Studies of new immigrant communities at home have been similarly slow to gain acceptance in the German discipline.

In Central and Eastern Europe the anthropology that became institutionalized (in absence of oversea colonies) was primarily the Volkskunde variant. But with the collapse of the Soviet bloc and better opportunities to read Western literature and to move westwards for their degrees, the younger generation has generally been attracted to Anglophone anthropology. But on the other hand, the tradition of national ethnography is still strong as it is easier to get funding: “Few politicians would risk sacrificing departments and institutes that were so closely identified with the identity of the nation”, Hann writes.

Nevertheless, these boundaries are increasingly being transgressed. Not only in Europe, but also in China, ethnologists and anthropologists arrange conferences together. The International Union of Anthropological and Ethnological Sciences (IUAES), will hold its 16th congress in Kunming, China, under the title ‘Humanity, Development, and Cultural Diversity’.

But why stop here, Hann asks and calls for more interdisciplinarity:

After all, given all the contingencies which have shaped contemporary academic boundaries, why make the presence or absence of terms such as ‘ethno’, ‘anthro’ or ‘folk’ the litmus test? Should anthropology not be just as open to sociology, to political economy, and to cultural studies? The claims of archaeology and the biological sciences are especially strong, not because there was a common agenda in Frazer’s time but in the light of contemporary interdisciplinary interests in evolution which we should not be ignoring.
(…)
Reconciliation of the strands on which I have focused here would help to overcome the paradoxical parochialism of the post-Frazerian discipline in Britain. It would also be a modest prelude to major theoretical refurbishment, vital if we are to engage more effectively with the other disciplines that have encroached on space that should be ours.

The whole article in Anthropology Today is only accessible for subscribers. For more information the state of anthropology in Eastern Europe, see my interview with Vytis Ciubrinskas: “Anthropology Is Badly Needed In Eastern Europe”

SEE ALSO:

How can we create a more plural anthropological community?

Book and papers online: Working towards a global community of anthropologists (World anthropologies)

Keith Hart and Thomas Hylland Eriksen: This is 21st century anthropology

The Five Major Challenges for Anthropology

In attempts to globalize anthropology, it is a good thing to translate into Chinese textbooks such as William Haviland’s Anthropology, but it is also desirable to hold on to what is distinctive in local disciplinary history, Chris Hann suggests in…

Read more

“Minner om tida før Sovjetunionens fall”

På søndag er det parlamentsvalg i Russland. Stipendiat Hege Toje fra Institutt for sosialantropologi i Bergen forsker på Russland. I en kronikk i Dagbladet skriver hun at Putins støtteparti “Det forente Russland” oppfører som det gamle kommunistpartiet før Sovjetunionens fall:

I bosettingen jeg forsker i, får lokale byråkrater beskjed av sine ledere om å melde seg inn i Det forente Russland, samt å drive aktiv valgagitasjon og medlemsverving. Dette minner mye om rollen til det gamle kommunistpartiet før Sovjetunionens fall. Den gang kunne man ikke engang besitte byråkratiske stillinger uten å ha partiboka i orden.
(…)
Denne høsten har de politiske diskusjonene rundt russiske kjøkkenbord ikke dreid seg om parlamentsvalget i desember. «Alle vet» at Det forente Russland kommer til å vinne. Det er presidentvalget til våren som opptar befolkningen.

Valgkampen er ganske nasjonalistisk med budskap som «Vi tror på Russland. Vi tror på oss selv»:

Denne retoriske cocktailen blander det sovjetiske «plan»-begrepet med det nasjonalromantiske «troen på Russland», med bred referanse til russisk kulturhistorie basert på sterke nasjonale myter om russisk særegenhet og mystikk.

Bruken av sentrale historiske symboler fra ulike epoker er blitt et kjennetegn for Putin og Det forente Russland. I Krasnodar har denne retorikken sterk appell, og som over alt i Russland ellers er Putins popularitet sterk. Putin assosieres med stabilitet, i kontrast til de kaotiske reformårene under Jeltsin. Han fyller rollen som khozyain, en sterk, selvsikker og handlingskraftig leder, og oppfyller slik den russiske idealtypen for maskulin maktutøvelse.

>> les hele kronikken i Dagbladet

SE OGSÅ:

Ny doktoravhandling: Hemlöshet och människovärde i dagens Ryssland

Indigenous Russians Unite Against Oil and Gas Development

Illustrates the history of ethnic groups in Russia with exhibition of trousers

Tekster på Anthrobase om Østeuropa og Russland

På søndag er det parlamentsvalg i Russland. Stipendiat Hege Toje fra Institutt for sosialantropologi i Bergen forsker på Russland. I en kronikk i Dagbladet skriver hun at Putins støtteparti "Det forente Russland" oppfører som det gamle kommunistpartiet før Sovjetunionens fall:

I…

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