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Neuer Blog: Feldforschungserfahrungen in der Dominikanischen Republik

(via zerzaust) Sehr amüsant dieser Blog, spannend geschrieben. Feldforschungserfahrungen in der Dominikanischen Republik. Schon die Schilderung der Anreise (Gespräch mit Taxifahrer, ordentlich gefilzt werden von den Amis) ist der Besuch der Seite mit dem coolen Design wert. Ivo, die Autorin, hat vor ein Buch über die lokale Volksmedizin und – Religion zu schreiben und berichtet detailliert und humorvoll von ihren Erkundungen und “seltsamen Begegnungen” >> zum Blog “Ivo in der Dominikanischen Republik

(via zerzaust) Sehr amüsant dieser Blog, spannend geschrieben. Feldforschungserfahrungen in der Dominikanischen Republik. Schon die Schilderung der Anreise (Gespräch mit Taxifahrer, ordentlich gefilzt werden von den Amis) ist der Besuch der Seite mit dem coolen Design wert. Ivo, die Autorin,…

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How Media and Digital Technology Empower Indigenous Survival

(via Putting People First) Worldchanging has “tracked projects that use new technologies to empower indigenous cultural survival — from digital applications using Inuktitut, the Inuit native language, to the Aboriginal Mapping Project, which harnesses the power of GIS to help indigenous peoples manage their lands and resources, to the networked reindeer tracking of Saami Networked Connectivity Project”. Additionally, they point to the latest volume of Cultural Survival Quarterly. It is devoted to Indigenous Peoples Bridging the Digital Divide. Much to read! >> continue to Worldchanging

PS: Worldchanging is a blog devoted to “Models, Tools, and Ideas for Building a Bright Green Future” and Dina Mehta (Conversations with Dina) is one of the contributers

SEE ALSO:

Women in Cameroon:Information technology as a way out of the cultural cul-de-sac

Modern technology revives traditional languages

Internet and development in India

(via Putting People First) Worldchanging has "tracked projects that use new technologies to empower indigenous cultural survival -- from digital applications using Inuktitut, the Inuit native language, to the Aboriginal Mapping Project, which harnesses the power of GIS to help…

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Ethnologische Presseschau – neue und verbesserte Version

Nach einem guten Jahr im Netz wurde es Zeit, die Seite neu zu organisieren. Nötig war vor allem, die Menge an Nachrichten zu orden, damit man sie leichter wieder finden kann. Von nun an wird B2evolution als Blog-Software benutzt.

Im Seitenmenue sind von nun an die neuesten Kommentare und Forum-Einträge zu lesen und vor allem eine lange Liste von Kategorien. Es ist also nun möglich, auf einen Blick sämtliche Nachrichten über besprochene Bücher oder Ethnologie und Beruf oder über Migration und Integration etcetc aufgelistet zu bekommen.

Es gibt auch einen neuen Kalender mit RSS, bei den jeder Infos über Veranstaltungen, die eine Reise wert sind, eintragen kann. Die Einträge müssen allerdings von mir freigeschaltet werden.

Es kann gut sein, dass bei der Übertragung der Daten Fehler passiert sind. Diese werden in der nächsten Zeit behoben.

Nach einem guten Jahr im Netz wurde es Zeit, die Seite neu zu organisieren. Nötig war vor allem, die Menge an Nachrichten zu orden, damit man sie leichter wieder finden kann. Von nun an wird B2evolution als Blog-Software benutzt.

Im…

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Book review: Witchcraft in South Africa

Gary Kynoch, H-Net reviews Witchcraft, Violence and Democracy by Adam Ashforth

Many Northern academics, along with their African counterparts, are reluctant to engage with the concept of witchcraft for fear of appearing to label Africans as primitive. However, like it or not, notions of magic and witchcraft often play a prominent role in politics, armed conflict, perceptions of health and sickness, and all manner of social relationships. Instead of ignoring this basic reality, we need to acknowledge and investigate these dynamics.

Adam Ashforth embraces this challenge with his declaration that “no one can understand life in Africa without understanding witchcraft and the related aspects of insecurity”. Beyond simply describing the purchase that witchcraft has on life in Soweto, Ashforth sets out to examine the relationship between witchcraft beliefs and democracy in South Africa. >> continue

Gary Kynoch, H-Net reviews Witchcraft, Violence and Democracy by Adam Ashforth

Many Northern academics, along with their African counterparts, are reluctant to engage with the concept of witchcraft for fear of appearing to label Africans as primitive. However, like it or…

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Understanding the ‘Natives’ at a Big University: Anthropologist studies students

Gil Klein, Media General News Service

WASHINGTON – When most anthropologists do field work, they head off to places like Indonesia to study such things as 20th century head-hunting rituals. But when Rebekah Nathan wanted to study a foreign culture, she turned in her faculty parking pass, enrolled at her own university as a freshman and moved into a dorm.

“I had to learn a new language, a new speed of talk,” Nathan said. “Much quicker, much more shorthand. It comes from IM-ing (instant messaging). Even the number of “likes” in a sentence marked my age. I had to put a lot more in … so I talk like I know how he was like …”

Rebekah Nathan is not the anthropologist’s real name. She’s not saying where she teaches and did her research — or even where she was during a telephone interview. Her methods have raised a buzz in the academic community even before the September release of her book, “My Freshman Year: What a Professor Learned by Becoming a Student.” After an article and excerpt appeared in the “Chronicle of Higher Education,” she was criticized for involving students in her research without their “informed consent.” >> continue (Link updated)

SEE ALSO:

Getting Schooled in Student Life. An anthropology professor goes under cover to experience the mysterious life of undergraduates (The Chronicle of Higher Education, 29.7.05)

Rebekah Nathan: An Anthropologist Goes Under Cover (The Chronicle of Higher Education, 29.7.05)

Undercover Freshman (Inside Higher Education, 13.7.05)

An anthropologist’s undercover project raises ethical hackles (The Boston Globe, 7.8.05)

Gil Klein, Media General News Service

WASHINGTON - When most anthropologists do field work, they head off to places like Indonesia to study such things as 20th century head-hunting rituals. But when Rebekah Nathan wanted to study a foreign culture, she…

Read more