Added by Robert Guang Tian on November 27, 2010 at 5:00pm —
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Added by Robert Guang Tian on November 27, 2010 at 5:00pm —
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By Betsy Taylor
(published in NORTH OF CENTER, Nov 24, 2010
America’s founding documents speak in the first person plural with such power—“We the People…We hold these truths…We have warned them…We have reminded them…We have conjured them…We, therefore…solemnly publish
and declare.” Why has it now become so hard to say “We” as Americans
together?
This question has hounded me recently. On…
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Added by Betsy Taylor on November 25, 2010 at 6:13pm —
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AAA new proposed Long Range Plan drops reference to science. I find this a little troubling.
This is the mission statement:
Section 1. The purposes of the Association shall be to advance anthropology as the science thatstudies… Continue
Added by Jacob Lee on November 24, 2010 at 5:00am —
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National Geographic has been airing a series about annual migration in the animal world. From Monarch butterflies to African elephants, they are all beautifully documented. Their numbers are just overwhelming to watch. It's called "Great Migrations" because it's really a mass movement of bodies in hunger and in heat. Army ants march on like soldiers and form themselves into a gigantic barricade during…
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Added by M Izabel on November 23, 2010 at 5:57am —
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(found poem)
(An American's View of Berlin: 06-19-06)
The Croats are tanned,
the Swedes pink,
the Poles the color of powder.
They hoist the flags of their nations
and trundle like tiny
sweating armies under the sun.
The beer comes in big cups,
and the boats on the River Spree
glide past with music and accents
Italian,…
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Added by Achirri Ishmael on November 21, 2010 at 3:00am —
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[Found Poem]
he stood alone
at the 42 metro bus stop
just north of dupont circle last thursday
when icy traffic made the roads
a nightmare for drivers.
with his smartrip card in hand –
the…
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Added by Achirri Ishmael on November 21, 2010 at 3:00am —
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found poem
“Inhabitants of low-income countries
typically die before the age
at which they begin
suffering prostrate cancer
associated with toxic…
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Added by Achirri Ishmael on November 21, 2010 at 2:00am —
4 Comments
I owe my understanding that history must come from below, from peripheries, from the edges, and from the margins not to Howard Zinn but to Ambeth Ocampo, a famous historian in my country who was educated in Britain. He also writes for a national daily, and his subjects are mostly about our eighteenth-century heroes. He demystifies and "unclothes" them. The title of his book about our national hero, "Rizal Without the…
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Added by M Izabel on November 20, 2010 at 12:03pm —
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I was browsing foreign films on Netflix.com when the synopsis of "Le Ballon Rouge" (The Red Balloon) popped up. The synopsis said that it was about a Parisian boy who found a red balloon, and it asked if the red ballon found the boy. The posed question sounded playful and innocent, but it definitely tickled my mind.…
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Added by M Izabel on November 18, 2010 at 4:58pm —
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Marx between Mill, Mayhew and Dickens
Phil Swift's
brilliant post on the relevance of Henry Mayhew's 19th century investigations of London's working classes for a politicized ethnography today has set off many reverberations inside my skull. One issue is the relationship between Mayhew's project and Marx's. Both are highly critical of the social causes of the…
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Added by Keith Hart on November 18, 2010 at 2:00pm —
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When I first started
this blog I wrote a few posts about what different people do with photography, how they use it, and why. Those were inspired by social scientists and anthropologists who have looked into the social meanings and uses of photography--Pierre Bourdieu, Jay Ruby, Elizabeth Edwards, among others. Some of those posts looked at the lives of particular professional photographers, like…
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Added by ryan anderson on November 17, 2010 at 4:00pm —
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Like culture, ontology, which includes terms, categories, concepts of being, realities, relations, is dynamic because language is. I don't know if you still have to require me to quote someone about the dynamism of language and of all features embedded in it such as lexicons, syntax, semiotics, and, yes, semantics. I'm a little bit Chomskyan in my treatment of semantics. The latter can stand alone even without syntax, grammar, or structure, and that includes the standards of how it is used.…
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Added by M Izabel on November 16, 2010 at 9:38pm —
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I want to tell you about Henry Mayhew. His work is neither new (he wrote during the same decades as Charles Dickens), nor was he an anthropologist, yet for all that, he produced a vital and urgent anthropology that speaks critically to our current moment.
Mayhew’s aim (in his own words) was to ‘publish the history of a people, from the lips of the people…
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Added by Philip Swift on November 16, 2010 at 6:30pm —
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From one now popular perspective, anthropologists are supposed to be especially acute interpreters of what other people(s) mean. But meaning is not, of course, a topic restricted to anthropological theory. An e-mail delivered via Soc-Net points to
a deep review of philosophical and analytic perspectives of particular interest to developers of semantic network analysis. The abstract on arXiv.org reads as follows,…
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Added by John McCreery on November 16, 2010 at 10:28am —
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THE IMPASSE OF POLITICAL BELIEFS, MEDIA AND ASSOCIATIONS…
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Added by Tame Ramya (Tarh) on November 13, 2010 at 10:14pm —
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I used to join chess and scrabble tournaments for women in the city a day by bus from our village, just so I could use my prizes to buy every book by or about Derrida, my very first dalliance with postmodernism. I would lie about my age so I could join in adult divisions where the prizes were twice than those in teen…
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Added by M Izabel on November 13, 2010 at 7:18am —
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In our class in college, we were only ten from the only anthropology department in the Philippines. When someone asked about my major, I would say, “Biology.” When I was honest, the burden of explaining anthropology was always on me, and it was a laborious effort. Anthropology was not a familiar social science degree even on the campus. There were instances when…
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Added by M Izabel on November 12, 2010 at 3:10am —
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Rex over at Savage Minds has written a post with some special advice for AAA conference-goers on how they can make the best of the human experience by rubbing elbows with semi-celebs and nobodies while ignoring panels and papers as much as possible.
On Twitter and throughout the blogosphere, the anticipatory posts are beginning to appear…
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Added by Francine Barone on November 11, 2010 at 6:39pm —
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THE THREAT OF BEGGARS IN CAPITAL COMPLEX OF ARUNACHAL PRADESH…
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Added by Tame Ramya (Tarh) on November 11, 2010 at 4:13pm —
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