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A day in commemoration of slavery

The 10th of May is from now on going to be the national day in commemoration of abolition of slavery. 10th of May in 2001 was the day slavery was declared crime against humanity in France, which was the first country in the world to adopt such a law. It was the deputy from French Guiana, Christiane Taubira, who proposed the law, and its been named Loi Taubira after her.

In his speech, President Chirac proclaimed that “the greatness of a country is to take on all its history, the glorious pages as well as the dark parts. Our history is that of a great nation. Look at her with pride. And look at her as she is. That’s the way a people can unite and become more close(-knit).”

(As a foreigner, I do find interesting this constant return to the greatness of the French nation, and I can’t forget another of Chirac’s speeches lately on the issue of nuclear weapons, but be that as it may).

Le Monde greets Chirac’s speech and holds it together with two other speeches as strong and important moments of his reign as President: 16th July 1995 when he for the first time recognised the French state’s role in the deportation of thousands of Jews during the Second World War; 15th August 2004 when he honoured the North African and African veterans’ contribution to the liberation of France and the speech 30 January 2006.

(Again, many others in this country will not remember Chirac for these three speech, but rather for the one 19 June 1991, gone into history as “le bruit et l’odeur” (the noise and the smell), where the President lately so famous for his antiracist stance made speech worthy of Le Pen. I’d really like to say a lot about it, but be that as well as it may for the moment).

The 10th of May is from now on going to be the national day in commemoration of abolition of slavery. 10th of May in 2001 was the day slavery was declared crime against humanity in France, which was the first…

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Revolutinierte Afrika-Forschung: FAZ portraetiert den Ethnologen Georges Balandier

Anlaesslich der Herausgabe seines neuen, in Frankreich offenbar vieldiskutierten Buches “Le grand derangement” stellt faz-Autor Andreas Eckert en Ethnologen Georges Balandier vor. Von Balandier stammt u.a. die sympathische Aussage

“Eine Ethnologie, welche die gegenwärtige Situation ihrer Untersuchungsgegenstände ignoriert, pfeift auf die Welt, in der sie existiert.”

Diese Kritik richtete sich an Kollegen, die sich nur mit der Bedeutung von Ritualen, Mythen und Symbolen beschaeftigten.

In seinen heute als Klassiker geltenden Monographien, so die faz weiter, stellte Balandier viele der bis dahin gängigen Lehren über Kolonialismus und gesellschaftliche Ordnungen in Afrika in Frage. Er veröffentlichte mit die ersten Studien, die sich mit dem städtischen Leben im frankofonen Afrika beschäftigten.

Er hatte auch Bedeutung fuer die Entwicklung von Theorien ueber Ethnizitaet:

Nationalistische afrikanische Politiker nannten Ethnizität Hochverrat und wetterten gegen “tribalistische Tendenzen”. Balandier dagegen bezweifelte, daß ethnische Gruppen als ineffiziente und unbefriedigende Formen der menschlichen Gesellschaft zwangsläufig und mit Recht zum Untergang verurteilt waren. Er kehrte subversiv die Modernisierungstheorie um und deutete Tribalismus als Kampf gegen kapitalistische Ausbeutung und staatliche Unterdrückung.

>> weiter in der faz

Anlaesslich der Herausgabe seines neuen, in Frankreich offenbar vieldiskutierten Buches "Le grand derangement" stellt faz-Autor Andreas Eckert en Ethnologen Georges Balandier vor. Von Balandier stammt u.a. die sympathische Aussage

"Eine Ethnologie, welche die gegenwärtige Situation ihrer Untersuchungsgegenstände ignoriert, pfeift…

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Literature and I, hors sujet 1

– For those who are more interested in my research project than in my person, I hope you’ll excuse this post as it’s got very little to do with my fieldwork. It’s a too long (an delayed, as I’d forgotten to post it…) reply to a post on the anthropology blog Savage Minds.
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The questions from Savage Minds go: What were he books that changed your life, and which books (or films) turned you on to anthropology? I find the questions intriguing as they set off a reflection on the intersections of literary and academic trajectories in my life; can I find any significant connections between what I’ve read and what I have become? Since it often feels better to not do (exactly) as you’re told – especially since it’s my old supervisor who’s asking the question – I’ll neither start with literature nor with film, but with a photo exhibition I visited, not in the formative years, but a couple of days ago.

Sebastiao Salgado mostly photographs people under way of doing some mundane chore in their natural and cultural environment. Many of his pictures are of human beings under hard conditions – of refugees fleeing drought and hunger or manual labourers in developing countries – however; his enormous artistic feat is to portray them with so much human dignity that the viewer never forgets that it’s a complete human being that is depicted in front of her. The way Salgado manages to show toil/everyday life and dignity is amazing. Perhaps it’s his aesthetisicism – the lights, the perspectives, the geometries – which makes us see the humans and their world in this way. I find this achievement very inspiring for my own work. – But how can words convey the same complexity, the same richness… that is a challenge for academic writing, which however, I think anthropology is far better equipped to do than for instance sociology ☺… So, yes, in my opinion aesthetics and form matter.

Coming to think of it, it is this kind of ethnographic realist – however very artistic/aesthetic – depiction of humans and their (everyday) life I appreciate in most art forms. It would have been interesting to reflect similarly on the films I like. Do they have the same realist though aesthetic bend? Perhaps in another post…

I’ve read some really good, inspiring and thought provoking books after even I’ve turned thirty, and both authors I have in mind right now have ethnographic qualities: That is certainly the case with Honoré de Balzac and his Comédie Humaine, but also Michel Houellebecq, in a peculiar manner (my lack of literary education is palpable when I try to express myself on literature in this manner). In my opinion, Houellebecq is describing and commenting upon society in a similar way to Balzac, how unlikely that perhaps sounds to those who are familiar with the two authors. – By a funny coincidence, after I started drafting this post, I read a suggestion that Pierre Bourdieu is today’s Balzac or Flaubert. The argument goes that realist literature – à la the great authors of 19th century France – has become redundant: the social sciences have taken their place as today’s society has become too complex to be rendered comprehensible in a novel (Kjetil Jakobsen,2002, in the foreword to the Norwegian translation of Bourdieu’s Distinctions).

The books that changed my life and the books that turned me towards anthropology? Perhaps a couple of easily read Norwegian books about growing up published when I was 13-4 have given a particular direction to my life, if nothing else, just by the sheer number of times I read them. Until I turned 18, I read White Niggers by Ingvar Ambjørnsen and Beatles by Lars Saabye Christensen about 7 times each. (For the moment, I’d never dream of reading a book more than once. It’s got something to do with age, and my father, in his late 60s, has in fact started reading books over again).

A landmark in the intersection of my literary and academic (and thinking) trajectories came when I was made to write an essay for my baccalaureate on “outsiders in literature”. If it hadn’t been for it being a national exam I would have guessed that it was my favourite teacher who had come up with this title for me personally. The assignment made me reflect on the role of literature in creating acceptance for diversity in society. Through the means of empathy, literature can teach you understanding for people and ways of life which at first seemed strange and beyond your understanding. Anthropology can, I was later to discover, do the same thing; – sometimes through analysis and explanation, but often, I think, through emphatic writing. (The books I made use of in my exam essay was of course White Niggers, which I knew by heart, and Crime and Punishment by Dostoyevsky. As by providence I also mentioned the first Norwegian novel written by a second generation Norwegian Pakistani (Khalid Hussain) – Paki – and I still remember writing that we’ll probably see much more of this kind of literature in the future. (For the readers who don’t know my field, this “second generation” type literature is closely connected to what I do research on at the moment…) – So yes, I think the reflection sparked off by this baccalaureate essay has been a more important milestone in my life than any particular book I’ve read).

My taste for the bizarre (i.e. Houellebecq) – rather than the complete surreal – as was perhaps sparked off at 12, when I read a strange book my mother told me not to read. It was Homo Falsus or the story about the perfect murder, by Jan Kjærstad. It’s about a woman living out scenes from films by Greta Garbo as she travels to faraway places – it’s the kind of completely unintelligible book any 12 year old who wants to have their imagination shaken, should read.

After that, the classics followed as I went for the favourite authors of my pop culture idols (music has had a more noticeable effect on my life than literature, which perhaps has worked more subtly): The Stranger by Camus (Robert Smith, The Cure); The Process by Kafka (discovered through a Norwegian punk band named Kafka Process); The picture of Dorian Gray by Wilde (Morissey, The Smiths); Anna Karenina by Tolstoy (who was an anarchist, mentioned, I think by Ingvar Ambjørnsen). In Anna Karenina by the way, I remember a scene worthy of an attentive social scientist: a young girl is about to enter her very first ball. On the way down the stairs to the hall, she looks in the mirror and deliberately unstraightens on of the ribbons on her dress… Attention to significant details makes good literature, as well as good anthropology.

At the time my hang-up on growing up as an outsider-novels, as well as classics I was too young to understand, was waning, I turned to the author who became my favourite for a long time and who maybe, maybe is the reason why I’m in Paris at the moment. (I know for sure that the reason why I ended up doing fieldwork in London was music. Perhaps my interest in Paris is of a more “literate” bend?) Henry Miller writes about himself, apparently, (later I read a biography (Robert Ferguson’s) saying his books were mostly made up and that his intensely interesting life in New York and Paris in the 1930s for a large part took place in his own head), and in that sense his books can perhaps be classified as quite realist, or ethnographic, in the way that autobiography is. I haven’t read Miller for 10 years, but thinking back I’d guess that his description of people, places and everyday life is not at all bad ethnography. – If it wasn’t his own life, at least he was good at describing the life of others.

Though obviously, I’m not like the previous comments to this post; science fiction or fantasy have never been my cup of tea. Instead, thinking back, I seem to appreciate ethnographic-like realism.

In my early 20s, thus in the mid 1990s, I can’t remember I read much besides from my studies. (Well, I remember a few: one is American Psycho, by Brett Easton Ellis. A lot could be said about that one – I would say it’s poignant and horrid in the same manner as Houellebecq, but I won’t go into that now…). On a different note; I read of course the stars of the Indian wave; Vikram Seth’s A suitable young man, Rushdie’s Midnight Children and Satanic Verses and Arundhati Roy’s The god of small things. Did they turn me in direction of British South Asians? No, I don’t think so. Music did that. But I think perhaps the Seth and Roy taught me something about how to create a narrative. And really, isn’t A suitable young man a Comédie Humaine of 20th century India?

However, it was early in this epoch of my life that I decided on anthropology. It was one of the five different subjects I listed to my dad at the dinner table when I was still at school (the others were astrophysics (great cosmology), nuclear physics (working for Greenpeace), medicine (working for Médecins sans frontiers) or literary theory (probably something on Henry Miller)), but then anthropology slipped my mind for some years, until I had a conversation with a professor in chemistry. She told me that she had tended her various intellectual interests – in her case French literature and chemistry – until she became a researcher. After that she had little time for anything else than chemistry. At that very moment, I understood that I had to find a profession in which I could integrate my wide range of interests. Thus, no more natural science for me…

And of course the chauvinist answer is; anthropology. And anthropology really turned out to be the answer to my most pressing existential problem at the time: The “what do I want to do with my life” found its resolution at the moment I read the first chapters in my first textbook in anthropology (Small places, large issues by Eriksen, which, in Norwegian at least, is very well written!). Maybe it was all the ethnographic-like fiction I had read that immediately made me feel at home in anthropology. Or maybe it’s got nothing at all to do with the books I’ve read ☺

And finally, my favourite anthropological literature, listed partly by preference; “Putting hierarchy in its place” (article) by Arjun Appadurai, Europe and the people without history by Eric Wolf (a book I wished was written before I learned that it reallly existed!), Cosmologies in the making by Fredrik Barth, Soulside by Ulf Hannerz. Perhaps I’ll come back to why they’re important to me later (but its certainly not for their prose – when it comes to style of writing, I think my favourite is Evans Pritchard! It’s so realist, so full of detail…).

- For those who are more interested in my research project than in my person, I hope you’ll excuse this post as it’s got very little to do with my fieldwork. It’s a too long (an delayed, as I’d forgotten…

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Du kan alltid ringe en antropolog

Sexy undertøy til 3åringer? Flykaoset, eiendomsmeglersnusk? Jenter som driver med ekstremsport? Journalister har lært at antropologer driver med mye rart også her i landet og kan si noe mer eller mindre vettugt om de fleste spørsmål.

Her er tre eksempler fra de siste tre dagene:

Vil ha vekk undertøyoverdeler til 3-åringer

Tobarnsmor Aud Bodil Aga Krüger reagerte kraftig da hun oppdaget at knøttsmå undertøysoverdeler selges til treåringer. Sosialantropolog og Gunn-Helen Øye har heller ikke særlig sans for undertøysettet.
– Barn blir fort nok voksne. Jeg er lite begeistret over at slike voksenelementer skal bli en del av barnemoten, sier hun.
>> les hele saken i VG

Avsløringer går på tilliten løs

Oslo (ANB ): Kjente bedrifter og organisasjoner mister tilliten på løpende bånd. SAS er foreløpig siste selskap med knust omdømme. Dette svekker folks tillit til sentrale institusjoner og organisasjoner, mener Halvard Vike, professor i sosialantropologi ved Universitetet i Oslo.
– Tiltroen til norske institusjoner som noe spesielt uhildet, solid og kompetent, svekkes sterkt. Nordmenn er vant til å se på Norge som annerledes enn andre land, ifølge Vike.
– Vi har trodd at vi har spesielt gode forutsetninger for å unngå korrupsjon, manipulering og unnasluntring. Denne ideen er i ferd med å bli alvorlig svekket.

>> les hele saken på siste.no

Aktive jenter satser selv

Aktive jenter vil ikke lenger leke i skyggen av gutta. Nå lager kvinnene egne grupper innen «ekstremsporter» som snøbrett, kiting, klatring og utforsykling. — Utviklingen er en naturlig konsekvens når actionsport blir mainstream, sier sosialantropologen Olav Christensen ved Universitetet i Oslo og forfatter av boken «Absolutt snowboard».

— Ettersom samfunnet for øvrig blir stadig mer feminisert har gutta funnet andre arenaer hvor de kan leve ut sin maskulinitet, for eksempel ekstremsport. Med eksponering gjennom media har slik aktivitet gitt høy status. Kvinnene har derfor funnet ut at de også vil inn på disse områdene.

>> les hele saken i Dagsavisen

Sexy undertøy til 3åringer? Flykaoset, eiendomsmeglersnusk? Jenter som driver med ekstremsport? Journalister har lært at antropologer driver med mye rart også her i landet og kan si noe mer eller mindre vettugt om de fleste spørsmål.

Her er tre eksempler fra…

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New Open Access Journal: After Culture – Emergent Anthropologies

On the website of the American Anthropological Association, medical anthropologist Matthew Wolf-Meyer announces a new anthropology journal called After Culture: Emergent Anthropologies:

The first issue is planned for release in September 2006, and thereafter will be published semiannually (in March and September) and made available free through the internet (URL forthcoming).

This is good news for all of us who promote open access to scientific knowledge!

There will be no paper version of the journal “as this steeply raises costs”, he explains on his own homepage.

It doensn’t seem to be that much expensive to run a online journal. The total cost of one year’s worth of publications (2 issues, 200 pages), he writes, is approximately $3200 (based on University of California Press figures and including the costs of formatting, online storage and publicity).

Currently, they are seeking article manuscripts which focus on the interactions between nature, culture and society, or are in the general thematic areas of science and technology studies or critical studies of medical knowledge and practice.

Given AAA approval, the journal will be published by the University of California Press and made available through AnthroSource, he adds.

>> continue reading on Matthew Wolf-Meyer’s homepage

>> Call for Papers

On the website of the American Anthropological Association, medical anthropologist Matthew Wolf-Meyer announces a new anthropology journal called After Culture: Emergent Anthropologies:

The first issue is planned for release in September 2006, and thereafter will be published semiannually (in March and…

Read more