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Local Foods – New issue of Open Access journal “Anthropology of Food”

Lots of interesting articles can be read in full-text in the new issue of the journal “Anthropology of Food”, edited by Virginie Amilien and Gunnar Vittersø at SIFO – Norwegian Institute for Consumption Research, f.ex about “coalho” cheese in the northeast of Brazil, José Muchnik, Estelle Bienabe and Claire Cerdant write: “This pressed curd cheese made with non pasteurized milk, typical of this region, “is not just a cheese” for the local consumers. It represents their culture, their way of life and their way eating.

Rachel Eden Black conducted ethnographic fieldwork at Porta Palazzo in Turin, which has one of the largest and oldest farmers’ markets in Italy. Farmers’ markets not only support the local production of food, but also help in the sharing of local knowledge of culinary traditions.

“France has Champagne, Norway has tjukkmjølk”, Virginie Amilien, Hanne Torjusen and Gunnar Vittersø write in their article From local food to terroir product? – Some views about Tjukkmjølk, the traditional thick sour milk from Røros, Norway.

>> overview over all articles in Anthropology of Food “Local Foods”

Lots of interesting articles can be read in full-text in the new issue of the journal "Anthropology of Food", edited by Virginie Amilien and Gunnar Vittersø at SIFO - Norwegian Institute for Consumption Research, f.ex about "coalho" cheese in the…

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More on the return of spies to college campuses

As posted earlier, the CIA is sponsering anthropologists to gather sensitive information during their fieldwork.

The Kansas City Star provides more detailes about the spies on the campus. Among others, they interviewed Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, who leads the American Anthropological Association’s Committee on Ethics. She says:

“It’s the secrecy that runs afoul of our ethical code.When you don’t own up — when you don’t honestly say who you are, and for whom you’re working — then you’re not doing social science. You’re doing espionage.

Furthermore, we read that Felix Moos who defended the CIa-program in Anthropology Today says, that he “has fielded hundreds of electronic letters and interview requests from around the world and that “about 60 percent realize I’m on the right track”. He adds:“About 40 percent feel it’s government intrusion into the universities. You know, the usual suspects …”

>> read the whole article in the Kansas City Star

SEE ALSO:
“War on terror”: CIA sponsers anthropologists to gather sensitive information

As posted earlier, the CIA is sponsering anthropologists to gather sensitive information during their fieldwork.

The Kansas City Star provides more detailes about the spies on the campus. Among others, they interviewed Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, who leads the American Anthropological Association’s Committee…

Read more

Why American shopping culture is rejected in India

Daily Telegraph

It is easy to see why multi-national giants such as Wal-Mart, French rival Carrefour and Tesco, all of which are active in China, are so attracted to India. The country has the world’s second largest population after China with over 1bn inhabitants. But the largest problem for Western retailers hoping to enter India is cultural, and stems from the disparate nature of the retail scene.

Simon Roberts, an anthropologist specialising in India and founder of Ideas Bazaar, a research consultancy, says that attempts to create a shopping mall culture – so established in the West – have so far failed. Although chain stores will appeal to certain bourgeois communities in India’s so-called “million cities” (those with more than 1m residents), Roberts says that the demand could be limited because of families’ lifestyles.

Many families have domestic staff who do the shopping, and the concept of the “weekly shop” simply does not exist. India is also a deeply religious society, with doctrinal conventions governing behaviour. “An Indian woman in Varanasi might not leave the house except to go to the temple, so do you expect her to suddenly pop off to Wal-Mart?” he says. >> continue

SEE ALSO:
Simon Roberts’ blog at Ideas Bazaar

PS: Exciting to read an article about an anthropologist you know – or think you know, because you’re a reader of his blog. That’s the effect of blogging – as Andrea Ben Lassoued explains in “blogging and the “big men” in anthropology”

Daily Telegraph

It is easy to see why multi-national giants such as Wal-Mart, French rival Carrefour and Tesco, all of which are active in China, are so attracted to India. The country has the world's second largest population after China with…

Read more

Museen leiden unter Personalnot, Chaos im Museum der Weltkulturen

Frankfurter Rundschau

Innerhalb von elf Jahren wurde ein Drittel der Stellen gestrichen – mit schlimmen Folgen für manche Sammlung: Hinter der Fassade des Museumsufers ist die Zahl der Fachkräfte arg geschrumpft. Im Museum der Weltkulturen liegt die Afrika-Abteilung im Keller, zum Teil unsortiert: Es ist keiner mehr da, der sich auskennt. >> weiter

SIEHE AUCH:
Frankfurter Museum der Weltkulturen feiert 100-jähriges Bestehen
Wie das „Fremde“ ins Museum kam – Frankfurter Museum der Weltkulturen (Frankfurter Neue Presse)

Frankfurter Rundschau

Innerhalb von elf Jahren wurde ein Drittel der Stellen gestrichen - mit schlimmen Folgen für manche Sammlung: Hinter der Fassade des Museumsufers ist die Zahl der Fachkräfte arg geschrumpft. Im Museum der Weltkulturen liegt die Afrika-Abteilung im Keller, zum…

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Da tenårene kom til India

Aftenposten

– Jeg datet ikke før jeg var 20, men nå har “se og bli sett”-kulturen kommet til India også, sier sosialantropologen Ari Singh (34). Han har bodd femten år i USA, men er nå bosatt i India hvor han driver med feltstudier. Før ble indiske ungdommer regnet for å være unger til de ble gift, nå har tenårene kommet til India også, mener Singh.

– Indisk ungdom i dag har en selvbevissthet vi ikke hadde da vi var like gamle. Selv en mobilreklame i dag forteller dem hvordan de skal kle seg. De tilpasser seg det vestlige konseptet om frihet og letthet. Men man har ikke et indisk vokabular for disse tingene. Indere i dag kaller sine egne klær etniske. Etniske! Ikke indiske? De adopterer til og med Vestens vokabular, og gjør seg kule i det globale markedet, sier han. >> les mer

Aftenposten

- Jeg datet ikke før jeg var 20, men nå har "se og bli sett"-kulturen kommet til India også, sier sosialantropologen Ari Singh (34). Han har bodd femten år i USA, men er nå bosatt i India hvor han driver…

Read more