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Film skal forebygge HIV i Tanzania

Ole Bjørn Rekdal er utdanna sjukepleiar og sosialantropolog. Han har tatt hovudfag og doktorgrad på datoga- og iraqw-folka i Tanzania. Med bakgrunn i feltarbeida han har gjort, fekk han, i samarbeid med datogaene, ideen om å lage ein film om HIV og AIDS som rettar seg mot folkegruppa, skriver forskning.no.

Rekdal forklarer:

Seksualitet er strengt regulert blant datogane, men normene er annleis enn det me er vant til. Til dømes er samleie før ekteskapet ikkje akseptert, på den andre sida endrar mykje seg når ei kvinne giftar seg. Då har ho lov til å ha sex med alle brødrane og søskenbarna til mannen sin, forklarer Rekdal.

Å gifte seg inneber, på denne måten, ei slags seksuell frigjering for kvinnene. Tilgangen på mange ulike sexpartnarar er ein av faktorane som kan vere med på å fremje spreiing av HIV.

>> les hele saken

SE OGSÅ:

Cultural values and the spreading of AIDS in Africa

The emerging research field of medical ethnomusicology: How music fights AIDS

Ole Bjørn Rekdal er utdanna sjukepleiar og sosialantropolog. Han har tatt hovudfag og doktorgrad på datoga- og iraqw-folka i Tanzania. Med bakgrunn i feltarbeida han har gjort, fekk han, i samarbeid med datogaene, ideen om å lage ein film om…

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Contrat premiere embauche – Protesting à la français

Initially, I hadn’t planned to go to the major demonstration against the CPE (“contract ‘first employment'”) as it only tangentially touches the focus of my fieldwork (tangentially, as the CPE – Contrat Première Embauche – is part of Prime minister Villepin’s plan for égalité des chances: youth unemployment is high in France and even higher in the Zones sensible which is in need of the equal opportunities). But as the echoes of the chanted slogans reached all the way to my flat – situated at least 20 minutes away from the standard demo route Place de la République/Bastille/Place de la Nation – and I saw the diverted traffic as I leaned out of the window, I realised that the scale of the event made it worth defying the heavy rain and head for Nation.
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The ten minutes walk down Avenue Philippe Auguste, I was thinking about how different French politics are from what I’m used to. The implementation of the CPE is a good example. In L’Assemblée Nationale the politicians can speak loudly, clap, make noise and sometimes shout, and – most exotically – even express themselves with eloquence. In this, France is similar to Britain. The importance they give to demonstrations is however different.

One month ago, there was a discussion in the National Assembly on the government plan of implementing the CPE and other “equal opportunity” measures, which went something like this: A socialist politician shouted to prime minister Villepin (the architect of the CPE): – You should listen to the streets! (alluding to the first demonstration against the CPE taking place at the time). Villepin, Monsieur l’éloquence personally, replied, with oratorical pathos: I am listening to the streets… – but I also hear the ones who are not down at the streets (pointing to the rather feeble support for the demo). Demonstrations have thus an important political role to play in this country. (I’d like to give some other examples, but as this is meant to be a quick post, I’ll leave it for another time).

As I arrived at Nation, I noticed that 7 of the 8 boulevard and avenues running into the square were lined with the CRS – riot police – standing around, looking after their helmets, shields, batons and other riot gear… (The 8th street was of course the one where the protesters entered). I don’t think such demonstrations, full of healthy (though leftwing) pupils and students and more or less bourgeois labour unionists often turn violent, but the Republic obviously wants to put her measures at display. – So also with her boulevards and avenues, constructed broad and straight as they were in order to easily suppress popular rebellion…

I think about the republic and her broad boulevards, full of politics, as I linger for a while in Place the la Nation: I once participated in a tiny little demonstration in London (I think there were 16 000, which would hardly count as a demo in a country where hundreds of thousands take to the streets many times a year) making City a drum’n’bass dance party and consequently a no-go area for the police for hours… as the narrow and winding streets of City is not made for riot police.

After taking some blurred, grey and rainy photos of the last part of the demo down Rue du Faubourg Saint Antoine from Bastille, I hurried home in order to change shoes, socks, trousers and umbrella (ready for the dustbin) before I went to a neighbourhood democracy meeting in a nearby school, which of course turned out to be full of people discussing, objecting and protesting and talking about art and the importance of preserving small-scale artisan affairs for hours…

Initially, I hadn’t planned to go to the major demonstration against the CPE ("contract 'first employment'") as it only tangentially touches the focus of my fieldwork (tangentially, as the CPE – Contrat Première Embauche – is part of Prime minister…

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For an Anthropology of Cosmopolitanism

Some days ago I registered for the conference Cosmopolitanism and Anthropology at Keele University (UK). As a preparation, here some notes on anthropology and cosmopolitanism.

After the controversis around the Mohammed-cartoons, media loved talking about culture and religion wars and Huntingtons clash of civilisation. But maybe we should have talked more about cosmopolitanism than culture war. Isn’t cosmopolitanism more common than fundamentalism? In his article Anthropology as cosmopolitan practice? (subscription required) published in Anthropological Theory in 2003 (3):403–415, Joel Kahn writes:

I would suggest that a certain cosmopolitanism governs the practices of localized individuals and institutions, everyday interactions between individuals and groups, popular cultural activities, forms of economic relations, and institutions of village government.
(…)
Could one go further to argue that in instances where a breakdown of such cosmopolitan coalitions has taken place – in Aceh, West Papua, Kalimantan, the Moluccas more often than not this has been precisely a result of the imposition from above (by the Indonesian state, outside powers and institutions) of disembedded, supposedly universal, culturally neutral forms of power, jurisprudence and so on (that is, of liberal versions of the cosmopolitan ideal)?

In his paper he wants to recover “cosmopolitanism in recent social and political theory, a project to which according to him “surprisingly few anthropologists have so far contributed”:

The world which anthropologists seek to study is a world not of discrete and isolatable other cultures and societies, but a world of ‘intercultural’ or ‘intercommunal’ relationships.

A quick internet-search revealed that many anthropologists and social scientists make similar points as Kahn.

In the book Cosmopolitanism, Identity and Authenticity in the Middle East, Roel Meijer writes, that the Middle East was, in the past, “an open undefined territory in which groups of different religious and ethnic backgrounds intermingled and exchanged ideas and lifestyles”. In his review (source url-lost), Fred Halliday from London School of Economics concludes:

The main message of this collection of studies is that in the past the Middle East did embody certain forms of cosmopolitanism, but that modern forces – the modern state, anti-imperialism, the mass politics of secular and religious forces alike – have overwhelmed these forms. Globalisation now substitutes a different kind of superficial and consumerist, universalism.

The researchers stress that cosmopolitanism is no elite-phenomenon – it’s everyday practice. Per Wirten points to studies on the Bosnian war by peace – and conflict researcher Mary Kaldor:

As it turned out, those who defended cosmopolitan ideas often lived in small towns and villages where they hid refugees, saving them from ethnic cleansing and paving the way for continued co-existence. Many of them had never gone to university or even once left the place where they were born. In contrast, many of the most militant Croatian and Serbian nationalists had in many ways lead what we tend to think of as a cosmopolitan life: educated at foreign universities they felt at home in all of the major airports around the world and could converse in a relaxed manner with the global political and financial elite.

And in the anthology Cosmopolitics. Thinking and Feeling Beyond the Nation (red: Pheng Cheah and Bruce Robbins), Wirten writes, a number of philosophers, anthropologists and cultural sociologists are inspired by the Dominican migrant, the Kurdish refugee, the stateless Palestinian, the indigenous propertyless of Chiapas.

The conference organizers introduce the concept of cosmopolitanism this way:

One tendency has been to think of cosmopolitanism as transgressing the parochialism or ethnicism of the nation-state. In this view, cosmopolitans are travellers who move beyond national boundaries, and hence a cosmopolitan social science must study these flows and movements, or reflect on issues of global justice, human rights and governmentality.

This apparently commonsensical view has been challenged, however, in a deservedly much cited article by Kwame Anthony Appiah, ‘Cosmopolitan Patriots’. (…) Appiah speaks of a ‘rooted’ cosmopolitanism, and proposes that cosmopolitans begin from membership in morally and emotionally significant communities (families, ethnic groups) while espousing notions of toleration and openness to the world, the transcendance of ethnic difference and the moral incorporation of the other. His vision opens up scope for a cosmopolitan anthropology which builds on anthropological strengths of fieldwork in particular locales.

In her thesis on British Asian cosmopolitains, anthropologist Cicilie Fagerlid explains the difference between multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism:

While the prototype multicultural society is made up of enclosed cultural units with different but equal rights, the cultural flows do not stay within bounded groups, in a cosmopolitan society. Instead they intersect and mix in various ways in various individuals.

Doing cosmopolitan anthropology means questioning assumptions on “us” and “them”, she writes:

It has been important for me to show that the world is interconnected; I did not only share subcultural preferences with my informants, but we reflected on identity formation in similar ways as well. (…) My aim has been to make use of these parallels between lived urban life and life as an urban researcher.
(…)
We all need to acknowledge that there is no such thing as ‘us’ and ‘them’.

UPDATE: POSTS ABOUT THE CONFERENCE

What’s the point of anthropology conferences? (general summary)

David Graeber: There never was a West! Democracy as Interstitial Cosmopolitanism

Owen Sichone: Poor African migrants no less cosmopolitan than anthropologists

MORE TEXTS:

Per Wirtén: Free the nation – cosmopolitanism now!”

Book review: Cosmopolitanism. Carol A. Breckenridge, Sheldon Pollock, Homi K. Bhabha, and Dipesh Chakrabarty, eds (updated link)

Kwame Anthony Appiah on Cosmopolitanism: The Case For Contamination

Q&A with Kwame Anthony Appiah: Deepening the conversation about identity

Cicilie Fagerlid: “Beyond Ethnic Boundaries? British Asian Cosmopolitans” (459kb, pdf)

Steven Vertovec: Trends and Impacts of Migrant Transnationalism (updated link)

Steven Vertovec: Fostering Cosmopolitanisms: A Conceptual Survey and A Media Experiment in Berlin (pdf)

Rebecca Graversen: Imagining Other Places. Cosmopolitanism and exotic fantasies in multicultural cities

Mary Kaldor: Cosmopolitanism and organised violence

Per Mouritsen: Can Patriots Be World-Citizens? (pdf)

Edward Spence: Cosmopolitanism and the Internet

How can we create a more plural anthropological community?

Transnational Communities Programme – lots of working papers

Cosmopolitanism – from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

Some days ago I registered for the conference Cosmopolitanism and Anthropology at Keele University (UK). As a preparation, here some notes on anthropology and cosmopolitanism.

After the controversis around the Mohammed-cartoons, media loved talking about culture and religion wars and Huntingtons…

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Trendy å handle miljøvennlig?

Miljøvennlig shopping er glohett. Syv av ti nordmenn mener det er viktig å tenke etisk, når de putter matvarer i handlekurven, skriver VG. Avisa spør trendanalytiker og sosialantropolog Gunn Helen Øye og Annechen Bugge som mener at “å handle etisk bevisst er trendy som aldri før”. Men som alle antropologer vet er det stor forskjell på det som en sier og det en faktisk gjør. Også Karl Fredrik Tangen fra Oslo Markedshøyskole tviler på at nordmenn er så etisk bevisste og sier: “Vi vil alle fremstå som moralske”.

Dessuten er det jo flere forskningsarbeider som viser hvor sakte matvanene endrer seg. Matvaner er ikke noe som en velger fritt. Se blant annet:

Hovedoppgave: Hvorfor sliter salget av økologiske produkter i Norge? At økologisk mat er mindre populær i Norge enn ellers i Europa skyldes ifølge antropologen Ellen Marie Forsberg den norske likhetsideologien.

Den tabu-belagte Pizza Grandiosa -Doktoravhandling om den norske middagskulturen

Runar Døving forteller om “Den hellige matpakka”

Miljøvennlig shopping er glohett. Syv av ti nordmenn mener det er viktig å tenke etisk, når de putter matvarer i handlekurven, skriver VG. Avisa spør trendanalytiker og sosialantropolog Gunn Helen Øye og Annechen Bugge som mener at "å handle etisk…

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For mindre vekt på den etniske nasjonen: Marianne Gullestad med ny bok

Antropolog Marianne Gullestad er aktuell med en ny bok om nordmennenes forhold til “de andre”, melder Institutt for samfunnsforskning:

I boken identifiserer hun noen av de hverdagslige forutsetningene som ligger bak at bestemte forestillinger om nasjon, kultur og hudfarge nå er selvfølgelige for mange. Spesielt viser hun hvordan det helt umerkelig legges større vekt på avstamning og “blodets bånd” enn før. Hvert menneske må nå “finne seg selv”, og dette gjør at etnisk og religiøs kultur har kommet i forgrunnen til fortrengsel for sosial klasse og økonomisk ulikhet.

(…)

Hun argumenterer for å legge mindre vekt på den etniske nasjonen – med sitt fokus på avstamning og kultur – og mer vekt på det politiske nasjonsbegrepet – med sitt fokus på demokrati og statsborgerskap.

>> les hele pressemeldingen

SE OGSÅ:
Marianne Gullestad: Normalising racial boundaries. The Norwegian dispute about the term ‘neger’

Marianne Gullestad: Blind Slaves of our Prejudices: Debating ‘Culture’ and ‘Race’ in Norway

Marianne Gullestad: Det mangfoldige Norge. Forestillingen om det homogene Norge er med andre ord en myte

Forskning som livsform – Intervju med Marianne Gullestad

Antropolog Marianne Gullestad er aktuell med en ny bok om nordmennenes forhold til "de andre", melder Institutt for samfunnsforskning:

I boken identifiserer hun noen av de hverdagslige forutsetningene som ligger bak at bestemte forestillinger om nasjon, kultur og hudfarge nå er…

Read more