search expand

Visual anthropology: Documenting the economic exodus from Mexico

Monterey County Herald

Men are absent from the streets. It is often several years before they return from their farmworking, gardening or construction jobs across the border. Sometimes they don’t return at all, leaving their wives and children to live in shame.

The rural Mexican town of Ayutla is like so many other pueblitos (villages) — where economic opportunities are so lacking that men leave their families to try their luck in the United States.

The compelling story of Ayutla’s economic flight has been put to film — a work called simply “Ayutla” — by CSU-Monterey Bay students Annalisa Moore, Jessica Schorer and Jaymee Castillo. The students came across the town while doing ethnographic field research as part of a CSU-Monterey Bay anthropology class last year.

“We wanted to show the human side, the sacrifices people make to be part of the globalized marketplace,” said Moore, who is shopping it around various film festivals. >>continue

Monterey County Herald

Men are absent from the streets. It is often several years before they return from their farmworking, gardening or construction jobs across the border. Sometimes they don't return at all, leaving their wives and children to live in…

Read more

Riddu Riddu Update: Nunavik rocks Norway

Nunatsiaq News

Nunavik performers had enthusiastic audiences at last week’s Riddu Riddu festival in Arctic Norway, where attendance at the circumpolar arts, music and culture bash broke all previous records.

Some Sámi now consider Riddu Riddu to have more political importance than Norway’s Sámi Parliament or the Nordic Sámi Council. This year Sámi political leaders, including Sven Roald-Nystø, president of the Norwegian Sámi Parliament, and Ole-Henrik Magga, who heads the United Nations Permanent Forum for Indigenous Issues, were both on hand to underline the festival’s importance to the North. >>continue

SEE ALSO:
Riddu Riddu – Indigenous Festival (1) – The Bands

Nunatsiaq News

Nunavik performers had enthusiastic audiences at last week's Riddu Riddu festival in Arctic Norway, where attendance at the circumpolar arts, music and culture bash broke all previous records.

Some Sámi now consider Riddu Riddu to have more political importance than…

Read more

Vil helst sitte med en sosialantropolog i bilkø

Litt om antropologenes image ute i verden: På spørsmålet fra Dagsavisens utsendte hvem hun helst ville sette fast i bilkø med, svarer Norway-Cup leder Marianne Øgaard Bergh:

– Et interessant menneske. Jeg har ingen spesielle i tankene, men gjerne en sosialantropolog. Da kunne vi diskutert verdens kulturer, og kommet fram til hvordan vi kunne få fred i verden. I tillegg kunne jeg tenke meg å diskutere miljø og kultur. (Kilde: Dagsavisen, 25.7.04)

Litt om antropologenes image ute i verden: På spørsmålet fra Dagsavisens utsendte hvem hun helst ville sette fast i bilkø med, svarer Norway-Cup leder Marianne Øgaard Bergh:

- Et interessant menneske. Jeg har ingen spesielle i tankene, men gjerne en sosialantropolog.…

Read more

Anthropologist gets paid for hanging out in bars

Fast Company Magazine

Girl walks into a bar. Says to the bartender, “Give me a Diet Coke and a clear sight line to those guys drinking Miller Lite in the corner.” No joke. The “girl” is Emma Gilding, corporate ethnographer at Ogilvy & Mather, one of the world’s top advertising agencies. Her assignment is to hang out in bars across the country, watching guys knock back beers with their friends.

Since at least the mid-1990s, the advertising industry has been fighting a war on multiple fronts. Some larger firms believe that ethnographic research such as Gilding and Shapira’s can help identify consumers’ emotional hot buttons, allowing them to craft messages with more resonance.

But ethnographic research is not a panacea. For one thing, it’s expensive. The process is time-consuming. Paco Underhill, whose books Why We Buy and Call of the Mall are classics of modern retail ethnography, confesses to a bigger concern: How does this research translate into sales? >>continue

(via Ideas Bazar Blog)

Fast Company Magazine

Girl walks into a bar. Says to the bartender, "Give me a Diet Coke and a clear sight line to those guys drinking Miller Lite in the corner." No joke. The "girl" is Emma Gilding, corporate ethnographer at…

Read more

Antropolog: – Torshov er for de tenkende

Aftenposten Oslo

– Ingen sier “wow!” lenger om du forteller at du har kjøpt deg leilighet på Grünerløkka, sier Gunn-Helen Øye. Hun er sosialantropolog og trendanalytiker ved Prognosesenteret AS.
– Grünerløkka har “satt seg” som en ung, urban og singel bydel. Derfor er det morsomt å se hvilke mennesker som tiltrekkes av steder som Torshov.
– Og hvem er det?
– Mennesker med en ideologi. Tenkende mennesker, som leser bøker. De søker seg til et autentisk arbeiderklassemiljø, som ikke er tilgriset av hipfaktor. – Les mer

Aftenposten Oslo

- Ingen sier "wow!" lenger om du forteller at du har kjøpt deg leilighet på Grünerløkka, sier Gunn-Helen Øye. Hun er sosialantropolog og trendanalytiker ved Prognosesenteret AS.
- Grünerløkka har "satt seg" som en ung, urban og singel bydel. Derfor…

Read more