N e w s l e t t e r I s s u e N o . 8 SU M M ER 2 0 13 N e w s l e t t e r I s s u e N o . 8 SU M M ER 2 0 13 Greetings! The academic year 2012/13 has been busy experience for students and staff across all for staff and students alike. We have had a areas of academic life in the department. very successful visit by the Internal Quality Review, commending the Department for its The past academic year has seen a number openness and inclusivity, for our enthusiastic of staff- and student-led innovations that and articulate students, for the accessibility will become fixtures in the calendar for the of the staff, the effective pastoral support next few years. The first year BSc students provided to the students, and the commitment were taken again to an away camp in of staff to teaching. All the students the February, accompanied by a number of IQR team met were very positive about the staff. Undergraduate students at all levels Department and were appreciative of the were hugely active again in running the high quality teaching delivered by staff. Anthropology Society. We had very successful debates this year between members of staff This was the penultimate term ahead of the as well as new events such as a staff/student UK’s all important REF (Research Excellence ball. Framework) submission. Preparations reached a feverish state at certain times during the This term is always tinged with sadness as we year. The Department’s REF team is grateful say goodbye to our final year undergraduate for the patience and responsiveness of staff. students, several of whom were successful in We are going into the important submission winning coveted studentship funding at UCL, period quietly confident that the Department LSE and Cambridge. It is still too early to has done everything it can to remain at the know whether we were able to match our very top of the field. examination success from last year, when almost 60% of students received first-class In April our administrative team was joined degrees, but the headhunting of our students by our new Undergraduate Administrator, by leading colleges in the UK confirms our Jolanta Skorecka. For the first time in three standing as a Department leading the years we now have a full compliment of training in anthropology in the country. administrative staff and we are looking forward to creating a smooth and effective Enjoy your summer! Professor Susanne Kuechler, Head of Department FIELD-TRIP Sleeping in the darkness, like a seed beneath the earth Fond memories of this year’s First Year field-trip Johan Greve Petersen 1st Year BSc Anthropology Going to university of ten carries the idea of being buried in books, being locked away in lecture theatres and moving calmly (sic!) from one deadline to the next. Equally, does going to Glastonbury connote ideas of music, mud and an ocean of happy festival-goers. But this February reading-week roundly opportunity to exhale after surviving Our spiritual quest was facilitated by challenged both of these perceptions. half a year in urban London’s strangling The “Green-Men” of Dundon, a band This February, music still sounded from lack of nature, but a chance to engage of cultural ‘Others’, alien to the urban the bottom of the Somerset hills but in matters completely inaccessible in environment of Bloomsbury. With this time it was the high pitch tone of tutorials and seminars. The Body - as we them, we joined in an appreciation the swan-bone flutes, and the melancholy were constantly reminded throughout land and its history, saluted the four ex pressions of 30 ant hropolog y the trip – is the most important tool corners of the world, drank from the students humming over and over; “I for the anthropologist because bodily spring of enlightenment, and attempted will sleep in the darkness, like a seed engagement allows the ethnographer (with varying success) to sound like the beneath the earth. I will sleep in the…..” to tr anscend t he const r aint s of fire and the wind. These rites allowed armchair research, facilitating deeper us to bond and spend precious time The first-year field-trip to the Earth understanding and appreciation of with each other and with members of Spirit Centre was not merely an other cultures and cosmi. If only the staff in ways not possible back ‘home’ in Victorian evolutionist E. B. Tylor had Taviton Street. known “I will sleep….I will sleep…” Was this spending precious department Bodily engagement meant days of money on just “hippie’ing” around for exploring the powers of singing, a couple of days? Quite possibly. But dancing, hiking and storytelling, and three years in this department is a long above all, wait for it, sweating. Who of time to mingle with students without us could have imagined at the beginning really knowing them, and we returned of the year, 30 co-students squeezed as not just co-students, but as friends tight in a sweat-lodge the size of a with shared adventures and a very real Ramsay Hall single bed room, staying sense of how to enter ‘another culture’. put for hours, reciting ancient prayers, howling like wolves in the night. More like Summersweat than Somerset! ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 Top: ‘Preparing for the long awaited sweat-lodge Left: Warming up for the voice workshop 3 SPECIAL THEME: MYTH AND BINARIES Fx(a):Fy(b) = Fx(b):Fa-1(y). engineered wrappings for mythical sweets Tobia Farnetti, PhD Anthropology Alice Elliot, PhD Anthropology 2012 Several decades ago, on the heels of a two-year study of North American Zuni and Pueblo myths, the French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss came up with a formula which he thought described algebraically the logical structure of myth. In ‘The Structural Study of Myth’, a canonical essay that all students of anthropology eventually come to read, Lévi-Strauss wrote: “Finally, when we have succeeded in organizing a whole series of variants into a kind of permutation group, we are able to formulate the law of that group. It…seems that every myth (considered as the aggregate of all of its variants) corresponds to a formula of the following type: Fx(a):Fy(b) = Fx(b):Fa-1(y). Here, with two terms, a and b, being given as well as two functions, x and y, of these terms, it is assumed that a relation of equivalence exists between two situations defined respectively by an inversion of terms and relations, under two conditions: (1) that one terms be replaced by its opposite (in the above formula a and a-1); (2) that an inversion be made between the function value and the term value of the two elements (above, y and a).” To evaluate whether or not this attempt to mathematically model myth was a cipher of Lévi-Strauss’s genius or merely a case of misplaced scientism, CROC (the Cosmology, Religion, Ontology and Culture Reading and Research Group) met for a full day of reading, discussion and critique on Saturday, January 12th 2013 in the Department of Anthropology. In the brief text that follows, Tobia Farnetti and Alice Elliot present their reflections on the discussion. If there is something reassuring about the rule of the kingdom, or just a pot monumental tetralogy Mythologiques myth and folktales, it is that one always of gold – while the hero’s helper is which excavates the structural logics of knows where one stands with them. As good-hearted but weak, and the sage indigenous myths from the Americas, Vladimir Propp (1968) and then Walter is old and blind. One Ong (1982) observed long ago, the is tempted to say that characters of myths and oral narratives there are only so many tend to fulfil stereotypical roles and have characters in folktales characteristics that confirm them. So, and myths repeated in the hero is brave, but perhaps poor, and endless permutations, throughout the story he will undergo Jungi an arche t y pe s difficult tasks to save the princess (who, hidden behind every of course, is beautiful but helpless and one of the characters. generally has lusciously long hair) and thus climb the social ladder to its I n Claude Lévi- highest point. The hero’s symmetric S t r au s s’ n u m e ro u s opposite, the villain, struggles for the works on myth, and same goal – the love of the princess, p a r t i c u l a r l y h i s 4 Greedy Goatsuker ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 SPECIAL THEME: MYTH AND BINARIES the heroes are not brave knights and beautiful princesses but somewhat more colourful characters such as defecating sloths, greedy goatsuckers, jealous potters and men without anuses. What is more, the characters of Lévi-Strauss’s structuralist analyses do not represent fixed Jungian archetypes but constantly change and shift into something other than themselves, so that severed heads can turn into planets and women into birds. With Lévi-Strauss’s guidance, one will notice that some of these transformations are d ow nr ig h t i nve r sio n s . T hey frequently depict a world in reverse A young Levi-Strauus in Amazonia, c.1953 or a cosmos turned upside down in which everything becomes its opposite mythical thought are two autonomous and to concentrate on what the formula as, for example, when he writes in The and equal ways of thinking (i.e. myth is has to say not only about myth, but Jealous Potter(1988:80),“earthenware not a precursor of science). In which also about structuralist logic generally. [...] is used in ‘anti-cooking’ and… case, the mathematical formula could In fact, with its emphasis on inversion, boiling water instead of fire sets the be taken as an attempt by the ‘engineer’, structural opposites and permutation world ablaze”, Behind all of these who for Lévi-Strauss personifies the groups, the canonical formula is possibly transformations, lies the same structure, logic of science, to break the rules and best seen as the ingenious crystallisation and this structure can be expressed in imprison the intuitive creativity of myth of Lévi-Strauss’s thought: a refined, what Lévi-Strauss famously branded in the iron cage of algebraic logic. clean, concise testimony to the rigour “the canonical formula of myth” (see and imagination of structuralism itself. above), designed to show that ultimately Or, is the canonical formula, on the there is no single “better” version of a contrar y, an ironic and power ful References myth, one that is more complete or hint given to us by the master of authentic but that, rather, the myth is structuralism, of the unfailing structure Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1963. Structural all its variations and the relationship of mythical creativity: of its ability to anthropology. New York: Basic Books between them. The message of this stand as a specific type of imaginative mythologique is that the whole corpus logic that works on and with paradox, _ _ _ _ _ _ _1966. The Savage Mind. of Amerindian myths is ultimately without needing any external referent London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson one huge mono-myth with countless or trigger to reproduce itself rigorously variations, and that the formula is the ad infinitum? Then, the wrapping may _ _ _ _ _ _ _1988. The Jealous Potter. bones behind the sprawling flesh of its be engineer-like, but the sweet it Chicago; London: University of Chicago mythical imagination or mythopoeisis. envelops, and the message it delivers, is Press especially mythical in taste. Still, the question remains as to what we Ong, Walter. 1982. Orality and Literacy. are to make of the formula. Is it mainly a Should we treat the formula as a feat New York: Routledge fetishisation of the natural sciences and of applied mathematics and place mathematics, an imperialistic claim of through its machinery, the myths we Propp, Vladimir. 1968. Morphology of Western intellectualism over the “mind encounter in our tortuous ethnographic the Folktale. Austin: University of Texas of the primitives”? In the first chapter trajectories? Probably not. In the end, Press of The Savage Mind (1966),Lévi-Strauss it may be preferable to abandon the famously argues that scientific and awkward task of mathematizing myth, ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 5 SPECIAL THEME: MYTH AND BINARIES Schrödinger’s Ape: evolving human-animal liminality in modern Britain Kathleen Bryson PhD in Biological Anthropology “Chumanpanzee” – A Human-Animal “Liminal Zone”? (c) Kathleen Bryson 2002 A s a s t u d e n t o f e v o l u t i o n a r y When we assign such clear binary may not be the way we perceive it, and anthropology, I am interested in the categories, we implicitly believe that it is possible that essentialist thinking grey area between modern human there are essential, unchangeable influences scientific results, which beings and extinct ancestors, as well as qualities that the categorised object are often based on binary, either/or between human beings and other great possesses: we essentialise. Essentialism, categorical thinking. apes. I particularly focus on academic dichotomisation and stereotyping help and social paradigms in which one us make ready sense of our world. Indeed, in terms of the Human/ being is categorised as human (read Such “shorthand” thinking may even be Animal divide and in-group/out-group non-animal) and the other, an animal hard-wired in evolutionary terms. Does distinctions in general, studies suggest (a chimpanzee, for example). We often binarism reflect the “real” world? Or that we as humans discriminate against pigeonhole our surroundings into such were evolutionary forces at work that those we understand to be less than fully dualistic categories i.e. white/black, favoured dichotomous brains - because human, be they animals or homosexuals nature/culture, we/they, human/animal. those who simplify were somehow or females or the disabled. This is Often one side of a dichotomy has be t te r e quipped t o sur vive and an indication of infra-humanisation: more power in such ‘reciprocal alterity’ (e.g. heterosexuals generally have more rights and are accorded more “humanity” globally than homosexuals). In relation to the Human/Animal alterity, this distinction between Homo sapiens and chimpanzees is intriguing, as many of the boundary enforcements (such as cumulative culture, complex one’s in-group is more human than an “I am particularly focussed on academic and social paradigms in which one being is categorised as human (read: non-animal) and the other an animal (a chimpanzee, for example). “ out-group (Leyens et al. 2000). This suggestion in terms of discrimination has particular significance in the field of prejudice studies, and is linked to my own doctoral research. For e x a m p le , my P h D re se arc h concentrates on four classic binary alt e rit ie s (H um an /A nim al , M ale / tool use, Theory of Mind) are subject to reproduce? Alternatively, are dualistic Female, Heterosexual/Homosexual, interpretation – interpretation, in this categories reflective of our upbringing body/machine) that are often cited in case, by the more “empowered” half of u n d e r c e r t a i n s o c i o - e c o l o g i c a l biological anthropological studies. As a the dichotomy. conditions and power asymmetries and pilot project, I explored the rigidity or thus social constructs? The world itself fluidity of the Human/Animal alterity by 6 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 SPECIAL THEME: MYTH AND BINARIES gathering data on boundary perceptions astronomical growth of the internet. Bibliography of whether humans were considered All of these could be seen as a type to be animals, apes or primates. I did of “millennial animal-angst” where the Abercrombie, N. (1996). Television and this via the coding of human/animal category of what was “human” had to Society. Cambridge: Polity Press boundary categorisations from articles be protected, and thus the boundaries over a 16-year period of newspaper were drawn more tightly. Aosved, A .C . & P.J. Long (20 06). reporting in the UK (1995 –2010). Co-occurrence of rape myth acceptance, My goal was to investigate whether Indeed, in regards to in-group boundary sexism, racism, homophobia, ageism, societal concepts of “real” categories enforcement, several recent sociological classism, and religious intolerance. Sex potentially reflect political events or studies have indicated a high correlation Roles 55: 481-492 scientific discoveries – in other words, between essentialism by the more reflect cultural influence. socially enfranchised party and societal Capozza, D.; G. Boccato; L. Andrighetto instability that “emerged only when the & R. Falvo (2009). Categorization of My initial pilot study showed intriguingly dominant group was threatened by the ambiguous human/ape faces: Protection that inclusionality (humans are animals; prospect of social change” (Morton et of ingroup but not outgroup humanity. humans are apes; humans are primates) al. 2009). Group Processes & Intergroup Relations started out at a very high rate during 12: 777-787 1995, but t hen dropped stee ply In turbulent and conservative times towards the year 2000, followed by a our tendency to protect the category Leyens, J-P; P.M. Paladino; R. Rodriguezslight recovery. In 1995 we were fairly of humanity is strengthened (Aosved Torres; J . Vaes; S . Demoulin; A . comfortable grouping ourselves with & Long 2006; Capozza 2009), and Rodriguez-Perez & R. Gaunt (2000). fellow animals, and them with us. Then, societal shakiness could account for the The emotional side of prejudice: The by the year 2000, something shook that minimisation of the “human” in-group at attribution of secondary emotions to tolerance on a cataclysmic level. the expense of other great apes as we ingroups and outgroups. Personality and approached the year 2000. This process Social Psychology Review 4: 186-197 Why these tremors, and why then? of human/animal infrahumanisation Categorical boundaries are likely to that allows for in-group/out-group Morton, T. A.; T. Postmes; S. A. Haslam be sensitive to surrounding societal sorting might be based on natural-kind & M.J. Hornsey (2009). Theorizing narratives (Abercrombie 1996). What categorisations, possibly reflecting gender in the face of social change: resulted in this period of geopolitical a cognitive adaptation (Atran 1998). Is there anything essential about upheavals included a post-Cold War H oweve r, t his e sse nt i alism al so essentialism? Journal of Personality and shift of Western politics to the right in seems sensitive to cultural change – Social Psychology 96: 653-664 about 2000; the 9/11 event and ensuing thus suggesting that our concepts of military and economic conflicts; fin de reality itself and, therefore, scientific millennium anticipatory hype; and the discourse, are historically flexible. Wolf-Woman – A “Natural-Kind” Hybrid from Winterland / (c) Jessica Cheeseman & Kathleen Bryspn 2012 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 “Animals” (c) Kathleen Bryson 2009 7 FROM THE FIELD Living the Angry River: Bangladesh’s crumbling chars Rebecca Seglow Hudson 3rd Year BSc Anthropology I stepped down from the boat and was t h ro u g h B a n g l ad e s h’s e x p a n s i ve increase in intensity and frequency. Char tugged through the throng of eyes and rivers. Bangladesh is a delta, its land dwellers, with barely a carbon toechattering mouths. The young woman continually carved and re-carved by a print between them, are what theorists gripped my arm; my brutish English feet network of 200 coursing rivers. Chars mean when they talk about the ‘losers’ failed to grip the sticky earth. Flip flops are the delicate islands that emerge of global warming. I spent two months bending and sliding, I was rushed to the and disintegrate within these rivers. An doing f ieldwork in the nor thern island’s edge. She pointed at the silent, estimated 5 million people live on the chars of Bangladesh for my Final Year swollen river. She talked, ardent with chars, they are some of Bangladesh’s project, trying to comprehend how char urgency. Her sari whirled colour into m o s t m a r g i n a l i s e d i n h a b i t a n t s . dwellers negotiate the natural disasters each gesticulation. Annual flooding, occasional drought that compose much of their everyday and recurrent erosion rob already lives. “The land is breaking!” She pointed to indigent households of crops, livestock, the slice of mud on which we stood. homes and communities. Most of my I travelled to the chars with a local NGO “Do you see? Is it like this in foreign places? informants had been forced to move and many char dwellers thought I could Just yesterday there was a piece of land char over 30 times. Yet all insisted they assist them in some way: was I a doctor? here!” She laughed “In just two days, two weren’t nomadic: “We try to look for A vet? Could I help set up the high hundred metres of our char has gone! We stability” Muhammed told me, “I invest school they so badly needed? At these have nowhere to go, we are just waiting my future in this land, and I will continue to moments, anthropology felt sorely here. We are so afraid” do so. Maybe tomorrow it will crumble and impractical. More uncomfortable were I will be left with nothing. But I will keep encounters that revealed the mechanics I was in charland, the constellation investing; no one can predict what will be of inequality. I arrived at one char in the of fleeting, delicate islands scattered stable”. Each year, these climatic shifts middle of an argument between a char 8 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 FROM THE FIELD dweller and an NGO representative. (I fell through a banana-tree raft right programmes. Carbon outputs from The men stood at the centre of the char, into the river at one point) and long around the globe determine the level of staring into the oval fish pond the NGO discussions over tea and baked sweets erosion the chars will face in years to had installed for villagers to produce an gave me a glimpse at the texture of come. All the while, char dwellers patch income during the monsoon. The fish char life. Villagers banded together in together stability on the great silent pond was empty, a gaping lacuna at the times of trouble, swim- herding all the whiteness of the river. village’s centre. “We have nothing to eat! char’s cattle through the river when There is no work!” the char dweller yelled “Now the landowner has told us we aren’t allowed to cultivate fish here. He wants to do it himself! He will get all the profit! So what income do we have for the next three months? You told us the pond was for us”. Seeing me, the NGO worker turned his back on the man and rolled his eyes. My time in Bangladesh was one of the “My time in Bangladesh was one of the most disorienting, intense, enriching and thoroughly enjoyable times of my short life.” “He hasn’t a clue what he’s talking about” He explained, lighting a cigarette with a smile. “The landowner is a very good man; we have a good relationship with him, never mind about this chaura .” He 1 ushered me to the nearest boat and we left, leaving the villagers to lament the politics of the pond and devise new ways to survive the floods. Anthropology allows us to unpick the social threads that people make and are made by. In the dynamic chaos of my short fieldwork encounter, I saw these threads spring to life. Happenstances, observations, stories, jokes, mistakes ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 most disorienting, intense, enriching and thoroughly enjoyable times of my short life. People I met both in and out of the chars were unendingly generous and patient with me, and I thank them for teaching me how anthropology emerges from the spirited shambles of daily life. warned of flood, staying awake all night to ward off armed robbers who threatened to steal livestock. Yet what struck me most was how the texture of this ostensibly remote place was entangled in social threads on a global scale, the ‘place-making projects’ 2 of elsewhere. Development workers from 1 A derogatory term for a char dweller, associating them with rudeness , violence and poverty 2 G ill e , Z . a nd R i ai n , S . ‘G l o b a l Ethnography’ in Annual Review of Sociology, 2002. 28:271–95 Dhaka, with money from Britain, install the promise of fish ponds. Vestiges of Britain’s colonial land policy allow Below left: Two boys stand on a boat by landowning elites to revoke rights to the the side of a flooded char. Below right: An NGO worker tells the local char dwellers pond. Doctors from Luxembourg visit that they must be united and work hard to annually to oversee child vaccination cope with the latest flood. 9 FROM THE FIELD Some views of the Mongolian ‘Wolf Economy’ Rebecca Empson, Lecturer in Social Anthropology Food Market, Ulaanbaatar After reading that Mongolia now has the also hunted, hinting at the way in ‘A Partnership You can Trust’ or ‘A fastest growing economy in the world, which the economy could emerge Mine for Mongolians’. In the city, the I was keen to visit the country and see with streng th or alternatively, be Soviet-planned boulevards and housing how things had changed. While most subject to destruction. This fear of complexes had been interrupted by of the world is suffering the effects of destruction has fuelled widespread new buildings that cut through these the global financial crisis, Mongolia, concerns that Mongolia’s resources old visions with shining facades that we are told is apparently experiencing are being exploited by outsiders. The glistened alongside traffic that was economic growth unlike anywhere else. comparison with the Middle East is in almost permanent gridlock. This Large-scale foreign- and state-owned also evidence of fears such as potential certainly was a different city to the mining operations, involving gold, ‘overheating’ of the economy, where one I had encountered just a few years copper and coal are generating great the exploitation of natural resources before. Money from the new mineral hope for the future. Mongolia’s ex-Vice leads to a sharp rise in the value of wealth, it appeared, had penetrated local currency. Moreover, fears of the and proliferated every corner and “While most of the world is suffering the effects of the global financial crisis, Mongolia, we are told is apparently experiencing economic growth unlike anywhere else.” Minister of Finance has captured this sense of hope in his term ‘The Wolf Economy’ to describe how Mongolia could potentially ‘leap-frog a Western development model, drawing lessons from the Middle East, and be inspired by stories of Asian Tigers to build [their] own model’1. In Mongolia, the wolf is revered but 10 social and political pitfalls associated could be spent in the range of new with the development of a rentier state, shops and restaurants that filled the deriving most of its income from the streets. It could also be invested in the foreign exploitation of its resources, exclusive gated residential villas, such also abound. Aware of the economic as ‘Dream Land’ or ‘Buddha Vista’, and political disenfranchisement being located in the ever-expanding outskirts played out in the Middle East and West of the city which also house (albeit in Africa, Mongolians are rightly seeking a another direction) the growing felt-tent different kind of solution. But what kind settlements of those who migrate to of effect is this economic growth having the city from the rest of Mongolia in on people’s everyday lives? search of work. Arriving at Chinggis Khaan International Leaving Ulaanbaatar, I was keen to see Airport last summer and driving along what impact the emerging economy the potholed road to Mongolia’s had on the countryside. Travelling capital, large posters lined the roadside acros s M ongoli a’s b e au t i f ul a nd depicting smiling men wearing hardhats vast countryside, the seasonal rain and shaking hands in front of heavy transformed most of our route into a machinery with slogans proclaiming: muddy swamp, giving the sense that, in ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 FROM THE FIELD terms of infrastructure at least, things were very much the same as before. Arriving at a small district centre, of no more than 2,000 people, on the Mongolian-Russian border, however, it was obvious that things had changed. Mobile phone coverage now extended to the countryside. People could call each other before embarking on a visit. Electricity was available, if you had the money, and televisions were showing the London Olympics, while freezers hummed away in corners, interrupted only by power cuts when alone. We stayed in the far countryside down on another dry, salted cashew. meat defrosted for the millionth time, with my friend Dondog and his family. Walking round the 360 degree vista up and floors became sodden with the They are pastoral herders whose here in the clouds, the world felt quite pinkish colour of blood. Motorbikes two youngest daughters now go to divorced from that going on down were everywhere, zipping past corners university in Irkutsk, in Siberia. Picking below, where people were avoiding and over rivers in all directions so that wild strawberries in the forest, milking being splashed by the af ternoon one could almost always guarantee a their cows, preparing products for the traffic speeding past. This building, the lift from one side of the district to the winter, and chopping wood for the bar, its people, as well as the sheer other. stove, things did not seem so different distance and exclusivity it afforded on from before. Shamanic initiation the city and the country as a whole, T he se , along w i t h new e le c t r ic ceremonies were being held, parties and was another kind of materialisation cookers and sometimes washing gatherings took place, and slowly, as the of Mongolia’s so-called mineral boom, machines, appeared to be the material autumn began to show in the yellowing albeit one granted only to certain kinds manifestations of the ‘Wolf Economy’. grass, the hay-collecting season began. of people. Here, then, are some snap- The district centre now had two banks shots of Mongolia’s emerging economy with bank workers in crisp uniforms Returning to Ulaanbaatar, I scurried from some very different perspectives. sit ting behind desk s. They were around visiting friends across the city Outside of the GDP figures and indexes issuing a range of a different loans and before our return to the U.K. Cold and that circulate in the international press repayment schemes so that people wet from the rain, on my last day, I took media, it remains to be seen how far could purchase different commodities a chance and walked in through the this economic growth will actually or start businesses of various kinds. glass doors of Mongolia’s largest new go in creating the kinds of places, Making this money available to people sky-scraper. Shooting up its transparent communities and activities that have was one way in which the government lift, I glanced out of the window at the been predicted in its wake. was trying to diversify the economy. sprawling city down below. On the So that while economic growth may be 25th floor I stepped out into a kind of 1 w w w. g a n h u y a gc h h . b l o g s p o t . inevitable from the mining industry, it nest on top of the world. This was the com/2010/10/wolf-economy.html should not be confined to this activity infamous Blue Sky Lounge. Here foreign men in well-cut suits could be seen sitting in low-slung chairs behind cold beers or martinis talking to Mongolians through interpreters while crunching Top: Summer party for elders Left: Local naadam celebration Right: Delivering milk for sale All photos © Rebecca Empson ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 11 STAFF PROFILE An Interview with Susanne Kuechler Professor in Anthropology and Material Culture in the Department of Anthropology, her research focuses on creativity, innovation, and futurity in political economies of knowledge. W H AT A R E YO U C U R R E N T LY elaborate destruction of everything focusing on the displacement of barkDOING RESEARCH-WISE? WHAT that was associated with a deceased cloth production. However, the early PROJECTS ARE YOUR STUDENTS person, including the figures that are departure of a postdoctoral fellow INVOLVED WITH AT THE MOMENT? made as an image of the social body to assigned to study the fabrication of complete the last phase of the funerary large elaborate patchwork quilts in I have been Head of Depar tment process, the secondary burial. Made the Cook Islands, Eastern Polynesia, for a period of five years, and the for exchange, to mark and underwrite forced me fortuitously to take on the comparative perspective I had already future relations of sharing land and its ethnographic research to be conducted come to appreciate, coupled with products, Malanggan sculptures and in this area. There are no museum a theoretical introspection into the masks comprise one of the largest collections to work from because ‘material mind’, has been a life-saver. ethnographic collections housed in all quilts are gifted to be eventually Comparison imposed itself productively museums all over the world. This is returned to the maker’s household on my work when, after 15 years of because their sale by islanders came to and wrapped around her own or her conducting research in Island Melanesia, be seen as a way to secure the financial husband’s or child’s body in the grave several factors conspired to suggest resources required to stage ever more house that is positioned in every a relocation of my field-site to The elaborate and costly ceremonies. My garden. So, it took me a number of long Cook Islands in Eastern Polynesia, research established the first case study return visits to gain the confidence of where I have worked for the past 12 of what came to be known as ‘image- informants who were willing to open years. Gradually, too, the radius of my exchange’ and established its pivotal the trunks in which quilts are stored activities has shifted to more domestic importance to political economies temporarily between exchanges and fields, though not permanently, I hope. of knowledge that extend across their eventual deposition in the grave. expanding regions in Island Melanesia, Learning the art of stitching tivaivai My first long-term field-site was in as I was able to show that proprietary also led me to discover a topological the island of New Ireland, northeast rights to image-based resources (and way of thinking about transnationally of mainland Papua New Guine a . their mnemonic capacity) are central to e x t e n d e d r e l a t i o n s o f a f f i n i t y This island is known for its elaborate the governance of land-holding polities. (in-lawship), sustaining household funerary ceremonies that culminate in economies affected by migration to the carving, weaving, and moulding of When turning some 13 years ago to New Zealand and elsewhere. Inspired sculptural works for exchange between the history of the take-up of cloth by my growing curiosity in the many land-holding groups. Known under and clothing as ‘new’ material in the conne c t ions and disconne c t ions the generic name Malanggan, ritual Pacific, I initially had intended to between the ethnography of Island work and its product culminate in an continue working in New Ireland, P apu a New Guine a and E astern 12 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 STAFF PROFILE Polynesia, and against the background the difference made by the ‘design’ of organised now the second panel to be of my involvement in the writing of the materials to our perception of ‘cultures hosted on the international conference Art of Oceania book recently published of materials’. The theme of the social circuit, the American Anthropological by Thames & Hudson, I set out to write lives of materials is the subject of the Association meetings. Every single a comparative study of image economy second manuscript that I am currently one of my past students has become a and body politic in Oceania which I in the process of writing. professional anthropologist, taking up hope to finish this year. posts in publishing, museums, NGOs, CAN YOU TELL US SOMETHING and university departments, and I am WHAT NE W DIRECTION S HAS ABOUT YOUR PhD STUDENTS? very proud of all of them. YO U R R E S E A R C H TA K E N I N EUROPE? I have been fortunate to be able to WHAT NEXT? supervise a tremendous group of My work took a new direction when PhD students throughout my time I am half way through my 5 year role as it came to be informed by another here at UCL. Those that are in the HoD. I love to be mother-hen and look research project that started in 2005. process of research and writing up after the many needs of the department, Here, I headed a research group which now are working on the gold nexus, on whose manifold nature never ceases to is part of a European Network project networks in the UK materials industry, surprise me, but I cannot claim that it on Sustainability in a Diverse World. on hierarchy and sociality in the Max has not affected me. I rely heavily on Questions of why materials are taken Planck , on ar tistic inter ventions students and colleagues to tell me what up and others rejected, what provokes in Canada and New Zealand using I need to read to keep up, and busy material translation, and what it does woollen trade blankets, on material myself writing, trying to complete two to the way people think about their religion in Orthodox Christianity and major publications, rather than doing relation to one another and to the in the International Society for Krishna more research, every minute I can find objects they love, had emerged already Consciousness (ISKCON) in India, between admin and teaching. When from the ethnographic foci of the Cook and on disaster, ecology, and material the going gets really tough, I dream Island tivaivai. The European project on culture in northeast Queensland. My of returning to the Pacific. I love to diversity and sustainability inspired me students have been hugely active in plot the research proposal that will to direct my inquiry to the complex various Research and Reading Groups, enable me to triangulate my research world of the UK’s and European from chaos to organisations and by extending my comparative frame materials industry and to questions of sustainability, and they have collectively to Micronesia. Presently I have landed Below: Tivaivai from the Cook Islands ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 13 STAFF PROFILE on the decision to do research in the Then, in that very month of May when Marshall Islands where ironically I school finally was behind me, a notice almost ended up some thirty years appeared in the local newspaper ago, when, en route to fieldwork in that the local ethnographic museum, New Guinea, I decided to disobey my the Uebersee Museum Bremen, was supervisor, heading to New Ireland looking for volunteers to help move instead. Before I can reconnect with the objects in the exhibition into the the big wide world, however, I will have store in time for the renovation of the to finish writing my manuscripts – a museum. My mother, keen to have me motivating thought. out of the house and away from books, enlisted me, and I remember turning up H OW D I D YO U B E C O M E A N rather grumpily one bright May morning ANTHROPOLOGIST? TELL US A BIT on the steps of the museum. Amazingly, ABOUT YOUR CAREER SO FAR. I had finally found what I was looking for. By pure chance I was assigned to I grew up as a child in Germany, moving the Pacific curator who had himself every three years, which, given the conducted fieldwork in New Ireland federalist nature of Germany, involved (PNG), and I busied myself moving very Above: Malanggan Figure a considerable culture shock with every large Malanggan carvings into the store, move. For as long as I can remember cataloguing them, and reading about my all too vivid imagination has been them in the library of the museum occupied by books that opened up (I returned for three consecutive a world of intricate and fascinating summers, finally helping to reinstall relations, and after feeding on adventure the new exhibitions). Raptured, I books about American Indians, New tormented the curators to tell me what Zealand sheep farmers and African they had studied and where best to go, tribes, I soon turned to books in my and they suggested the Department father’s huge collection of French and of Ethnology at the Free University German literature and philosophy. in Berlin, where again by pure chance Today, af ter both my father and British social anthropology was read mother’s deaths, I have come to own in English. As I had been taught purely what has remained of the collection and in the classical languages of Latin and I share it with my eldest daughter, who Greek, I had to learn English before has taken after my father’s bibliophilic being able to read, and decided that inclination. Among these books was a I needed to spend a year in England copy of Malinowski’s Father in Primitive to really understand the books that I Psychology (Vol 5 of Magic, Science and found in the small ethnography section Religion) which I remember to have of the FU library. I enrolled as an devoured when I was around 14 years exchange student in the Department of old, as my mother recalled how I vividly Anthropology at the LSE and took part explained to her the role of the father in the 3rd year. On the back of the exam and the mother’s brother in Trobriand marks, I was invited back for MPhil/PhD Islands, while walking the dog. I had no work there. I indeed did return a year idea that a subject such as anthropology later after completing my masters in existed and could be studied right up Ethnology in Berlin. When arriving at until the completion of the German the LSE for MPhil/PhD work, Alfred Bache laureate. Gell, who became my supervisor, had in Australia. The rest is history. ARE YOU O N LY AN ANTHROPOLOGIST? Ye s , I wo u l d s ay t h a t I a m a n anthropologist with a radar for the ethnographic and that this extends to all aspects of my life. I am afraid that I have been so very busy, juggling teaching, research, and raising a family that I have become a truly boring person, clinging to straws that are held out to me in the attempt to catch up with what is going on around me, often in vain. My imagination is lived out almost completely in my ethnographic and theoretical ruminations, and I look forward to the time when I can return to the books I once so loved and reach out to discover the new heights in the publishing world. I have been able to maintain a few passions, such as swimming and opera, tending to my orange tree (now bearing fruit after 13 years) and, as most of you will have realised, eating pretzels. also just returned from a period spent 14 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 FROM THE FIELD Go your own way: new directions from walking in the field David Jeevendrampillai PhD Anthropology (Material Culture) Early spring 2012 I started my fieldwork. In mid-February I walked into the back As part of UCL’s Adaptable Suburbs of a traditional local pub in Surbiton, Project, and funded by the Engineering a leafy affluent suburb of London, storytelling and the invention of myth. and Physical Sciences Research Council knowing that a group of people who The third walk recreated an old English (EPSRC), the project aimed to develop called themselves ‘Seething villagers’ ritual called ‘beating the bounds’ in a deeper understanding of suburbs as were preparing for a community parade. which the boundaries of place were ‘small settlements’ in spatial relation to I found them crafting giant lamps, fish marked out through an annual walk and other areas of the city. It was hoped that and giants heads. When I asked why site specific ritualistic ‘taking of pains’. by understanding the changing patterns they were doing it they responded ‘it’s (We swapped this last bit for more fun of road networks and the patterns for fun’ and handed me a glue brush. things than pain-taking!) The last walk of business activity along them, the That was day one and, by the end of it, I merged the personal archive of home project could inform policy on how to had made a giant wicker lamp! and memory with arrival histories to best plan for (sub)urban environments, the area. especially those which are vulnerable Over coming months I told people to changes in economic planning of my interest in their relationship to At the end of the fieldwork, I was and implementation. The role of the Surbiton and invariably I was told to struck by how the map remained empty anthropologist (me) on this project was ‘talk to so and so’ and more often than and how local enthusiasm had rejected to chart how people understood the not, told to visit places, buildings or funded training from Blue B adge role and importance of change where streets. People regularly offered to walk walking guides, but had rather done they live in relation to street networks me around and show me their place. things on its own terms, using creativity and associated business activity. Walking was important not only in the and fun to develop sociality and spread sense that people perceive, interact it through the resulting ‘landscape of I was tasked to roll out and encourage and understand the world in this way value’. It is this spreading, sharing and the use of an ‘auto-ethnographic’ web but also it is important in showing and scaling up of values, associations and tool called a community map, through sharing with others the values and meanings that I’m currently fascinated which people could upload their stories associations with place. by, and my thesis seems to be talking of what it was like to live in the suburbs. less about spatial properties but more I wondered about what sort of people Through the f ieldwork I became about forms of knowing and how they would spend time doing this, who would interested in the notion of showing place move, spread and share, and so change want to show me, us ‘their’ place, and through walking. In all I developed four the material expressions of self and what was is in it for them. I started to walks with the residents of Surbiton, landscape. think about local enthusiasts and set off but the form they took and the interest to find some. they took in them surprised me. The It’s funny how you set off to walk one first walk involved no leader but rather way, but end up somewhere else. But an exercise in collective decision then fieldwork in anthropology is all making about the next place to walk about being guided someplace new. to along the route, resulting in a messy Right? and contested walk. Walk Number Two merged fact & fiction using local history creatively blending fact with ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 Top: Debating the boundaries of place. Far left: The Giant of Seething parades through Surbiton. 15 CURRENT STUDENTS Doctoral research feature – Art and Anthropology an interview with Eitan Buchalter... Eitan studied Fine Art at Oxford, publications or funding proposals) but graduated with an MSc in Medical my research shows they can be better Anthropology here in UCL, and is understood as dynamic processes. now researching his doctorate in In the former case, ideas become the Department. institutionally ‘frozen’, permitting only incremental shifts in thinking. Conveyor, performance at Tate Modern, 2009 What is your research about? Why did you move from a degree in Fine Art In my work, I explore ideas as an to an MSc and then PhD in anthropology? Which of your works are you most happy analytical category and examine what with? ‘ideas’ mean to scientists. By their I can see how it may seem like a change nature, ideas are dynamic and are best of direction but, in my head, it all Well, Conveyor was a very exciting thought of as ‘networks’ that are acted makes perfect sense! As an artist, I project . This was a per formance upon by scientists’ beliefs, experiments, am interested in human behaviour and where I stood at the top of one of discussions and the institutional settings so, in an attempt to delve more deeply the escalators at Tate Modern (see within which science takes place. into this, further study in anthropology photo) and made eye contact with seemed like a perfect fit. “As an artist, I am interested in creative human behaviour and so, in an attempt to delve more deeply into this, further study in anthropology seemed like a perfect fit.” everyone who happened to be on it. The escalator gradually became a stage Are you an artist first, and anthropologist filled with people working out that they second? were performing. If you force me to choose, then I think How do people react to your art work? so, but I never really think about it like this! I am sure I am not alone in saying Everyone reacts differently and, for me, that I just try and do as much of the observing these different reactions is things that interest me as possible. exactly what I am interested in. The central argument is that there is a disconnect between the dynamic way that scientists themselves think about ideas and the stifling institutional environment in which academic science is conducted. At the heart of this tension are institutions that value ideas as static objects (for example, as delivered and communicated in peer-reviewed 16 It just so happens that this interest crosses the boundary between art and What’s your next project? anthropology. Can I be an artist first and an anthropologist first, as well? I am working on a book in collaboration with the photographer Manuel Vason. Who are your main inspirations for your artwork? What do you plan to do after your PhD? Marcel Duchamp and Tino Sehgal Teach! ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 CURRENT STUDENTS Tasty things! ... and an interview with Arsim Canolli A r s i m C a n o l l i w a s b o r n i n forms to grow and flourish. I was then food’, they ask, ‘in the country that only Prishtina, Kosova. He came to the exposed to the anthropology of art and politics matters?’ Sometimes I have an UK in 1997 where he studied art at landscape, and that was the main thing answer, but most of the time I listen to London College of Music and Media that encouraged me to enrol to do an their answers. and then anthropology at UCL In MA in Material and Visual Culture at 2010, he left to do his fieldwork in UCL. What’s your next project? Kosova. He is currently writing up his PhD thesis entitled “Behind Why did you choose to study food for your I’m inspired by ethnographic film. open doors: the social significance PhD project? Robert Gardner films are my favourites, of food in Kosova”. He loves his ale especially “Dead Birds”. He is one of and fish and chips. Well, as I grew into anthropology, the most passionate hunter-gatherer I came to think that food and art are of visual images in the discipline of Why did you move from a degree in art to “tasty things” that people cannot live ethnographic film. And so, after my an MA and PhD in anthropology? without. And their significance lies in PhD, I want to complete a documentary film I’ve already commenced called “All art aspires to the condition of music” said Walter Pater. This saying was uttered to me by the pathway leader at the London College of Music and Media (in Ealing) when I went for an interview in 2001. I came to enjoy “I felt that exploring how food works with people would give me some ideas of how to proceed with anthropology.” surroundings that enable particular art old couple who have turned their house into an ethnographic museum in Lekaj, Montenegro. The film-making process started in 2011 and is still going on. What do you plan to do after your PhD? studying art and aesthetics, but felt that I wanted to explore the cultural “The Highland Museum”. It is about an the traditional as well as innovatory relations bet ween them. A s the philosopher Berkeley said, the taste of an apple is neither in the apple – for an apple cannot taste itself – nor in the mouth, but in the eater. It is in the contact between them. I felt that exploring how food works with people would give me some ideas of how to proceed with anthropology. How do people react to your work? I want to go back to teach at the University of Prishtina in Kosova and help my colleagues in the Department of Anthropology there. It is a young department and we believe it has great potential. Last semester I taught a course in Legal Anthropology which was a whole new area for me. It helped me better understand legal anthropology and teaching. During this time I also translated Malinowski’s “Crime and Custom in Savage Society”. Well, people in Kosova sometimes get surprised about my food project. ‘Why Both interviews conducted by Paul Carter-Bowman Left: 100m long breadloaf served in Prishtina during Albanian’s In dependence Day - 28 November 2012 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 17 RESEARCH Life insurance, risk and hope in London Sofia Ugarte Pfin MSc in Social and Cultural Anthropology ‘Life isn’t predictable and for this reason it’s wise to plan ahead and look at all the options that could help secure your future.’ (The Guardian 2012) How does life insurance work upon Working with the concept of ‘hope’ deal with loss and failure in the financial modern life’s uncertainty? And how can gives rise to new perspectives when market. Hope for them is a method this be of interest to Anthropology? studying life insurance and risk as it of knowledge, specifically, a ‘method Despite being a quotidian practice both shows how uncertainty, knowledge, of radical temporal reorientation of in urban and rural areas, insurance has agency and temporality play together knowledge’ (ibid.). been almost completely ignored by in a different level of analysis. Vincent anthropology. The first challenge faced Crapanzano views hope as a category during my Masters research, has been of experience that presupposes a to relate life insurance to anthropology metaphysic and is embedded in peoples’ in a theoretical and ethnographic way. cultural and historical reality. His theme To this end, I am applying frameworks is hope as a subject of analysis. Hope from the anthropology of risk and the mediates and realistically opens up the anthropology of hope to the voices of future in front of us, pushing its borders the insured, the uninsured and the life towards a mysterious and transcending insurance companies. Due to life’s uncertainty, some people decide to contract a life insurance policy in order to feel secure that their families’ will always be provided. The nature (2004: 100-104). Hope, unlike unconscious desire, orients knowledgewise towards the future, having its However, how does hope relate to the work life insurance in securing the future of uncertain livelihoods? The hypothesis I want to develop during my fieldwork is that life insurance works as a source of hope in Miyazaki’s sense: as an aid to knowing outcomes in the context of radically uncertain futures. How life insurance works as a ‘technology of hope’ is what I aim to explore among both insured and uninsured Londoners. source in a non-human agency that REFERENCES could be God, fate, chance, fortune. Crapanzano, V. (2004). Imaginative insurance is a contract whereby an By contrast, Hirokazu Miyazaki’s work horizons: an essay in literary-philosophical insurance company promises to pay on hope is related to his ethnographic a n t h r o p o l o g y. C h i c a g o: C h i c a g o selected beneficiaries money when the work he has conducted with Suvavou University Press insured person dies. The insurance has people in Fiji and Japanese traders in a cost determined by the life insurance Tokyo. He approaches hope not as an company and the expected mortality emotional state or a positive feeling but rates. This translates into an insurance rather as a method (Miyazaki 2004:5). Miyazaki, H. (2003). The Temporalities of the Market. American Anthropologist, 105(2), 255-265. policy that can be paid by the insured He uses hope to understand how person once a month, once a year, or different forms of knowledge make sense once in a lifetime. The decision to take to people in uncertain circumstances: life insurance is related primarily to the Fijians who want to recover their risk of dying. 18 ancestral land and Japanese traders who ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 EVENTS Travel, imagination and experience Will Self and Jonathan Lamb visit the Department Professor Chris Pinney introduced the as Will’s own first book – about an drawing much authority from the fact event to a packed house of staff and anthropologist from South London who of ethnographically ‘being there’ and of students, describing Will Self first of all discovers a ‘boring’ tribe in Amazonia. framing the cross-cultural encounter in as “novelist, cultural critic and psycho- Today, though, will went on, this trend narratives that drew in a wide audience. geographer enthusiast for armchair is reduced to parodies of its former Today, though, (Jonathan Lamb thought) anthropology, author of an imaginary glory in TV shows like Jungle Jane or the anthropological attempt to express ethnography of sorts (The Book of Bruce Parry’s Tribes. This has occurred the inexpressible in ethnographic Dave), and Professor of Contemporary mainly because the bre adt h and language seems distinctly limited. Theory at Brunel.” And then, Jonathan density of communications networks Lamb “Professor of Literature at have ended the pristine isolation of Unsurprisingly, the anthropological Vanderbilt University, a specialist in Anthropology’s traditional subject- audience was enthralled and miffed Eighteenth-century literature who has matter. Instead, anthropology is being at the same time. From it, came the written extensively about travel and popularly replaced by activities like his strident response that, true enough, who, like Will, has done some really own psycho-geography where walks the discipline is no longer popular in the punishing travelling not least through anywhere without computer and mobile same genres. But that, in different ways his participation in the BBC programme phone (ouch!), for example, between and with varied publics and on different The Ship, a re-enactment of Cook’s Piccadilly Circus and Heathrow Airport, geographical scales, it continues to first voyage.” escape the net and enter ‘the wild’ in a develop as a strongly influential vehicle way analogous to Anthropology in its for the exploration of social and cultural The pair were invited to address a hey-day. otherness. The audience agreed. The range of themes that, they were told, speakers looked doubtful. The meeting might include travel literature and Jonathan Lamb then went on to place ended. Drinks ensued. Thanks Chris! anthropolog y as cultural critique, Anthropolog y within a venerable the relationship between imagination history of influential writings based and experience and, crucially why upon epic Western contacts with anthropology may have lost the ability remote otherness. This meant not just Concocted by Chris Pinney & Allen to confidently narrate alterity or expressing the strangeness of other Abramson (staff), and Kiran Morjaria ‘otherness’ to a broad public. cultures specifically (as Rousseau did) & Alistair Cooper (MSc in Social and but, more widely, trying to capture Cultural Anthropology) Will Self stressed that the 1970s the sublime otherness of any elusive a nd 8 0 s we re a b oom - t ime for phenomena that have only ever been Anthropology in popular culture. The translated and conveyed subjectively. In striking convergence of anthropology a sense, you really did need to “have and popular culture was reflected in been there to know”, ‘there’ being the works of Desmond Morris and where the expressible meets with Carlos Castaneda (the latter’s accounts the inexpressible to nonetheless be of the Mexican Yaqui shaman, Don Juan expressed! Anthropology classically sold over 28 millions copies), as well sited itself at this anomalous interface, ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 19 EVENTS To Hypothesise or not to Hypothesise? That is the Question! Ruth Mace and Sara Randall ‘fight’ it out for The Anthropology Society One of the highlights of this year’s already established, and therefore material that fall outside the scope of Anthro Soc events was the much whether demography should in fact, be the pre-fabricated hypothesis. The anticipated meeting between two of the considered, a science. Professor Mace audience of staff and student argued department’s longest standing members, suggested that Professor Randall’s the point enthusiastically. A fascinating Professor Ruth Mace and Professor demographic methodology ultimately evening that provided insight into Sara Randall. Expected to be something amounted to data collection, providing both the disciplines of demography of a showdown (hence we advertised the raw materials through which and human evolutionary ecology and it with a boxing-style poster), the scientists like Professor Mace test their the motivations and opinions of their evening was surprisingly convivial! One hypotheses. In return, Professor Randall (convivial) exponents! particularly lively point of debate was argued that entering the field with a whether in “doing science” one must hypothesis in mind may pre-emptively Liz Fox approach one’s data with a hypothesis exclude anomalies or unexpected Foreign Bodies: understanding the Other Foreign Bodies is an exhibition embodiment of sin due to its t h at i s i n U C L’s N or t h wild yet human-like behavior. Cloisters and across UCL Through seven very different Museums from 18th March - research projects, audiences 14th July 2013. are invited to explore the idea of what is alien to us – The exhibition is curated by biologically, psychologically, research students and its socially and politically – and aim is to re-interpret UCL’s how this concept has shifted museum collections through across history, culture and the theme of ‘foreign bodies’. even species. M y o w n w o r k a s a b i o l o g i c a l attempts to understand primates across We are also expanding the topics ant hropologist involves studying thousands of years. For example, the covered in the exhibition online, at baboon behavior in Gashaka Gumti Egyptian God of writing, Thoth, is http://blogs.ucl.ac.uk /researchersNational Park in Nigeria. And, as one depicted as a baboon scribe in an ancient in - museums / and on Twit ter @ of UCL’s Researchers in Museums as explanation of the dexterity of primate ResearchEngager. well, I have is presented relevant images hands, while a 15th century Christian alongside objects that illustrate similar ar twork depicts a monkey as the 20 Suzanne Harvey ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 EVENTS Economic and Political Transformations in Inner Asia Cerne Abbas Trip At the end of the Spring term, a self-presentation among Mongolia’s one-day workshop was held in the urban elite. Anthropology Department, dedicated to exploring themes of economic and The second panel examined processes Cerne Abbas Giant political transformation in Inner Asia. of political tr ansformation, and included presentations on the political- The research and reading group, This region has experienced profound economic situation in the Kalmyk ‘ Primate Sexualities: Beyond the economic and political changes since Republic and nomadism among the Binary’, is co-facilitated by Professor the end of State Socialism in the Humli-Khyampa of Nepal. It went on Volker Sommer and Kathleen Bryson. 1990s, and our workshop provided to look at techniques of the self in We explore dichotomous concepts an oppor tunity for scholars and China with presentations exploring the such as “us” and “them”, and “gay” and students working on this region to use of new media among the Hui, and “straight”, and various ideas linked to come together, and present their self-cultivation through tea drinking in the biology and cultures of sexuality: work on these themes in a series of Beijing. how differences might be shown to be panel presentations. It was especially hard-wired (or socially constructed) by interesting to hear presentations from The third panel engaged with routes studying primates, and how we as naked students from different Universities and borders, and addressed China’s primates define each other against (UCL , Cambridge, SOAS, LSE), at economic presence on Russia’s border, perceived normative behaviours. different stages of research. as well as reindeer herding in northern Mongolia, and rumours circulated on After discussing a variety of papers Drawing together case-studies from the internet in Russia and China. exploring how sexuality is expressed Mongolia, China, Siberia, a Tibetan and accepted - from fetishism to community living in Nepal, and the T h e ‘ E c o n o m i c a n d P o l i t i c a l bisexual males, and from asexuality Kalmyk Republic in southwest Russia, Tr a n s for m at ion s in I nne r A si a’ to robot-human sex - we visited the the workshop was divided into three workshop delivered a highly enjoyable Cerne Abbas Giant in Dorset in early panels. day, and provided a crucial opportunity April. The landmark is relevant to to engage with people working in this the exploration of attitudes towards The first panel focused on Mongolia region, and to hear them present their public sexuality in medieval Britain and and it addressed ritual economies - work. provided an excellent opportunity for with a focus on shamanic economies, a comparative assessment of modern and money used to decorate shamanic British societies and social landscapes. coats – as well as processes of learning Joseph Bristley a m o ng M o ngo li a n c hild re n a nd After visiting the “Rude Man” himself - weather did not permit us to have Mongolia , by Liz Fox a reading group al fresco, as was our original intention - we hiked down to the local abbey and stockade (see photo), then took refuge in pubs and teahouses and held our discussions over lunch. It was a fascinating end to a stimulating year. Kathleen Bryson ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 21 DEPARTMENT NEWS Padma Shri Award intended to enable graduate students in Gottingen (Germany) and carries to advertise their innovative research. out interdisciplinary social science Overall, 247 posters were displayed in research on diversity in historical and the North & South Cloisters. contemporary societies, particularly conce r ning e t hnic a nd re ligiou s First prize in the faculty grouping “Arts forms and dynamics. The institute is & Humanities, Laws, Social & Historical leading a European pilot project about Sciences” was secured by Kathleen medical diversity which Bea’s work will Bryson, PhD student in the Department contribute to directly. o f A n t h ro p o l o g y su p e r v i se d by Professor Volker Sommer. Her poster entitled “Evolving the Binary: Are Faith and Flame We Already Living on the Planet of Christopher Pinney, Professor of the Apes?” featured a case study that Victoria Baltag has won a prestigious Anthropology and Visual Culture at UCL explored fixity and ambiguity in social award in Popular Prize category at the has been awarded a Padma Shri by the and scientific categories. The judges LSE Research Festival for a short film Government of India for contributions lauded Kathleen’s work for its simple she made: Faith and flame. to Literature and Education. explanations of complex concepts. See Kathleen’s article on page 6. 108 Padmas were awarded this year, six Faith and Flame is an anthropological documentary about the life of Roma to non-Indian nationals of whom three Kathleen’s winning post can be viewed people in modern Romanian society. were persons of non-Indian heritage. A at: www.grad.ucl.ac.uk /comp/2012- The film focuses upon Roma history, medal and scroll was presented by the 2013/poster/slash-wi1.html President of India Pranab Mukherjee in the Rashtrapati Bhavan, New Delhi on 20 April in the presence of the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Max Planck Award Professor Pinney has worked on popular visual culture in central India Beatriz Aragon, a first year PhD student since 1982 and has taught and lectured in the department, has been awarded widely in India. His publications cover a 2-year doctoral researcher position c u l t u re a n d i d e n t i t y a n d Ro m a photography and printed political and with stipend at the Max Planck Institute Holocaust, as well as on contemporary devotional images. His first book was for the study of Religious and Ethnic issues including the predicament of Camera Indica. His latest, due later this Diversity. The award will help fund her Roma children in schools. year, is Lessons from Hell on popular PhD research about Roma minority printed Hindu images of punishment in and their interactions with healthcare LSE’s Research Festival is a celebration hell. Poster Competition Won by Kathleen Bryson services in Madrid. of the creativity that lies at the heart of all research. This year, the posters, The Max Planck Institute is located films, photographs and apps entered by research students and staff from LSE, Cambridge, SOAS and UCL formed a brilliant showcase of work that engaged fellow researchers and general public alike, UCL ran its 2012/13 Graduate School Research Poster Competition on 25th and 26th February. The event is 22 ANTHROPOLITAN SUMMER 2013 Recently Awarded PhDs Alison MacDonald - Breast Cancer Emiliano Zolla Marquez - Territorial Survivorship in Urban India: Self and practices: an anthropolog y of Care in Voluntary Groups geographic orders and imaginations in the Sierra Mixe Tom McDonald - Structures of hosting in a south-western Chinese town Beata Switek - Reluctant intimacies. Japanese eldercare in Indonesian hands Alice Elliot - Reckoning with the outside: emigration and the imagination Sumiko Sarashima - Intangible cultural of life in Central Morocco heritage in Japan: Bingata, a traditional dyed textile from Okinawa Heidi Colleran - The evolutionary anthropology of fertility decline in Catalina Tesar - “Women married off rural Poland to chalices”: gender, kinship and wealth among Romanian Cortorari Gypsies Sandra Tranquilli - African great apes: assessing threats and conservation Alesya Krit - Lifestyle migration: efforts Architecture and kinship in the case of the British in Spain New Appointments Jolanta Skorecka joined the department administrative team in April as a new Undergraduate Administrator. She previously worked in Development Planning Unit, The Bartlett. ANTHROPOLITAN is published by UCL Anthropology. Contributors: Beatriz Aragon, Arsim Canolli, Joanna Cook, Joseph Bristley, Kathleen Bryson, Eitan Buchalter, Alice Elliot, Rebecca Empson, Tobia Farnetti, Liz Fox, David Jeevendrampillai, Suzanne Harvey, Rebecca Hudson, Susanne Kuechler, Johan Greve Petersen, Sofia Ugarte Pfin, Christopher Pinner, Chris Russell Editors: Allen Abramson, Paul Carter-Bowman, Man Yang /UCLAnthropology Cover Photo Courtesy of Joanna Cook www..ucl.ac.uk/anthropology