word clouds of my thesis

i think everyone else should make one, too, since we obviously don’t have time to write real posts.

-e.h.

Long time no see, blog! To my fellow bloggers- if you’d like to add a description of yourself/your interests/ your work to the “contributors” page, feel free. If I know you well I might write about you myself… in that case, feel free to edit it/get mad at me.

I found a good thesis-fodder Oregonian article today… relevant for me and not you, but I’m sure you’ll find it interesting. My thesis (about prostitution, masculinity, governmentality…) in part deals with policing in Portland OR, ideas about criminality, and how “criminals” are defined and profiled. Apparently since 2003 the Portland police have had a secret “most arrested list” of the 35 people in the city most frequently arrested for petty/non-violent crimes. When the ACLU and a few attorneys declared the list unconstitutional, an investigation confirmed that it had grown from 35 to almost 400 people. I expect (though the article does not mention this) that many of those on the list are people who are “suspected or known prostitutes,” who are frequently arrested on property violation charges (loitering, etc), or drug-related charges if the “intent to solicit” charge is a stretch for a given situation.

Read the article here.

promises

November 26, 2008

Dear readers, if you exist:

As an anthropologist I mostly feel like a little kid playing with toys I’m not yet old enough for.

Nevertheless, don’t despair- we’re all really busy right now (finals!) but look for posts in the coming weeks on:

Transgenic corn in the Mexican milpa (intellectual property rights and nature narratives)

Zapatista commodities, identity and the crisis of U.S. radical activism

maybe even:

David Graeber, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and why activists (and you too) need to get over the ’60s

Christian anarchist moments on the blogosphere.

And those are just the promises I’m making. In the meantime go read American Ethnography or something.

ugly food is illegal

November 14, 2008

Horrifying ethnographic tidbit! Apparently in the EU it’s illegal to sell produce in non-standard shapes. Regulations are being “relaxed” — but only on 25% of produce. Why, European regulators, why? (Thank Jonathan at the blog “Wasted Food” for leading to gasps from my station in the library.)

Check out this video from the ever-amazing BrownFemiPower (originally via Carmen). Watching people dance makes me happy!

To be topical, there’s some interesting stuff in the comments when Ilyka asks (and I paraphrase) “is the revolution really as simple as dancing?” BFP says “It gets a lot harder when you start thinking in terms of larger abstract concepts like “equality” or “freedom” or something along those lines–cuz everybody is going to have a much different idea on what “equality” means–for example, the rwoc [radical women of color] critique of white centered feminism that applies here is what do you mean when you say equality with men? MOC [men of color] aren’t ‘equal’ with white men–so who are WOC [women of color] trying to be equal with? What group of men? And can we include equality with wihte women, cuz we aren’t equal with white women either, ya know?”

And then “and it seems like far too often–we get together to cry, and then run back out into the fight again–and forget to recognize that joy in today’s world is a radical emotion–the mobilization of joy and love and commitment is something that so rarely happens–because it’s not realistic, it’s not angry and mean enough, it’s considered ‘candy’ organizing, you know? but what gender is associated with joy and love and commitment? would a gender analysis be useful in understanding why “snotty and snarky” is rewarded and joy and love is dismissed?”

So, question: When do things need to be simple and when do they need to be complicated? In anthropology or otherwise?

Full Circle Open Access!

November 9, 2008

So I was skimming over some really cool anthroblogs in bloglines (which is a really cool blog manager, btw), when I came across, Open Access Anthropology, run by Kerim Friedman, Alex Golub, Kambiz Kamrani, and Christopher Kelty (all of whom are pretty involved in the anthroblogosphere. The most recent post is about Clarence Gravlee’s site, a prof at Unversity of Florida, who’s work covers…drum roll please…racial and ethnic inequalities in healthcare contexts! Most of his publications, teaching materials, ponderings are available on his site.

In his lecture, “Anthropology and Ontology,” Descola discussed the various mechanisms through which ontologies are used, and how things (people, animals, objects) are distributed within the world. The lecture provided structuralist ways of understanding the various ways people understand the non-human other in non-naturalist terms (naturalism, roughly boiled down to the assumption that nature exists and contains all truths, though feel free to correct me on this one).

Feeling rather confused at the time, I approached a professor of mine who rather gleefully provided the following diagram. The diagram represents how one’s body and interiority (religiosity, spirituality, etc) are positioned in relation to a non-human. Totemism, for an example, explores how certain entities (like a human and an animal) share characteristics. That a totemic animal can be used as a form of identity expression, “The qualities of a raccoon are the same within me, we are linked.” Animism, on the other hand, is the view that there is a continuity of souls (say, between a human and an animal), yet a discontinuity of bodies. One can break this bodily discontinuity by adorning oneself with the body of the animal (e.g.) or other types of clothing. Analogism represents the discontinuity among both the body and interiority of the relationship, so one must be created, or as Descola describes, “terms that are joined myst be initially distinguished.” Naturalism is the concept that we are all continuous as bodies-in-the-world (we are all made up of the same particles), yet there exists neither an internal nor a “supernatural” connection.

While this diagram leaves out many shiny bits from the lecture, it does provide quite a handy and simple Descola toolkit for befuddled students. It’s also easier to file away in the noggin. Anyone else present at the lecture should feel free to chime in!

I don’t mind if this blog starts off as (or ultimately amounts to) a collection of “OMG look at this cool thing!” posts.

Laura Maria Agustin’s work on women’s migration, sexual economy, and the human trafficking “rescue industry” is damn fabulous. I am so down. What’s even better is that so much of her published work is available open access on her really great blog.

In response to all the wonderful attention to oa in the anthropology blogosphere such as savage minds, culturematters, and golublog, I could not pass up the opportunity to share this alternative bibliography managing tool that lets you directly cite information from articles, books, and pages found on the web. You can even set up folders (takes inspiration from itunes music folder design) to organize and visualize your sources. It’s a lot faster than endnote, and could save time for anyone who might be thesising. . .

happy (open)sourcing!


call out

October 10, 2008

I’m going to christen this baby with a cry for help.  It would have been so easy to start with a rant. Instead I’m going to pick the collective brain.  Here’s the deal: I’m working on a project about misappropriation, useful appropriation, and plain old white-people-appropriating-brown-people’s-stuff-appropriation.  Specifically, I’m looking at the use of Zapatista commodities and Keffiyeh among young, left, and hip United Statesians. Utopian translations of movements that have wheels? Solidarity? Problematic fashion choices?

I’ve  got data and ideas coming out my ears, but here’s the thing: anyone have any suggestions for literature on the consumption and appropriation of revolution?