Wednesday, October 27, 2021
headstones maker at work
Thursday, September 23, 2021
archaeology from melting snows - Mongolia prehistory
Friday, September 10, 2021
outreach & archaeology topics
www.northwestanthropology.com/
While many of us do a lot of outreach, I think it is safe to say we need to do more to make this world a better place. I'd be interested in my colleagues thoughts on strategies they have used to reach more.
Saturday, August 28, 2021
English spelling - some hurdles for new learners
Sunday, July 25, 2021
Archaeology beneath today's Istanbul
Monday, March 1, 2021
Language and Zoom remote video communication, American Sign Language
Friday, February 19, 2021
films in Native Languages - LOTE (Languages Other Than English)
Thursday, February 11, 2021
book and documentary (Kyushu) - 40 years of Japan fieldwork
book and documentary (Kyushu) - 40 years of Japan fieldwork
Sunday, January 3, 2021
archaeology - 12 sites featured in Smithsonian Institution book
Friday, November 13, 2020
online resource to explore for anthropology
Sunday, July 19, 2020
Dogs sniffing our (human) bones from centuries ago
As a result, dogs have demonstrated uncanny olfactory abilities. They have sniffed out melanoma skin cancer in humans and detected pregnancy in cows just by picking up scents in their bodily fluids.
So, what exactly are canines detecting at archaeological digs? "Our dogs are not actually searching for bones," Glavaš emphasizes. "They are searching for the molecules of human decomposition."
Tuesday, June 30, 2020
Stories told by trash of the ancestors, digging on Mackinac Island
Friday, June 26, 2020
language as political hot-potato that is hard to handle (English graveyard, Gaelic text)
...the Church of England pushed back again when they saw the planned inscription on the cross: "In ár gcroíthe go deo," which means, "In our hearts forever" in the Irish language. This didn't seem particularly radical, especially as there are already Welsh inscriptions in the same cemetery. But once again, the diocesan advisory committee denied the family's headstone proposal. "Given the passions and feelings connected with the use of Irish Gaelic," said a Church judge who is also a local government judge, "There is a sad risk that the phrase would be regarded as some form of slogan or that its inclusion without translation would of itself be seen as a political statement."
After yet another appeal, the judge agreed to allow the Irish words only if they're accompanied by an English translation.
Thursday, June 4, 2020
Britain's "Pompeii" time capsule, the Bronze Age site at Must Farm
Awarded the 2020 Antiquities prize for newly published and open access article, "The Must Farm pile-dwelling settlement."
The article provides a site overview and the current interpretations of the archaeology alongside discussing the material found during the 2015-16 excavations.
See https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2019.38
or look at Facebook for updates to the project, https://www.facebook.com/MustFarmArchaeology/
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Language listening - ear for regional accents
Monday, April 27, 2020
online Anthropology encyclopedia
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
exploring anthropology's view, several short videos
Public Anthropology
c/o 45-045 Kamehameha Hwy., Kaneohe, HI 96744
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
45 years of fieldwork --documenting Japanese rural life in Kyushu since the 1970s
Tuesday, March 3, 2020
the 100 languages as of 2020
Saturday, June 22, 2019
languages of Australia - last chance, Miriwoong
Thursday, May 30, 2019
close-up look at Orangutans of Sumatra
The seventh of the GoPro HERO3+ Adventure Series. What we do for orangutans, we do for ourselves. Peter Pratje, of the Frankfurt Zoological Society, introduces us to our orangutan family and reveals how we, as individuals, can help prevent their imminent extinction. Shot 100% on the HD HERO3+® camera from http://GoPro.com. For more information ... www.youtube.com |
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
intersection Mikmaq x English
https://youtu.be/99-LoEkAA3w [blackbird sung to showcase indigenous language]
https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2019/05/22/blackbird-mikmaq-indigenous-language
Saturday, May 11, 2019
reporting on pre-college anthropology 5/2019 from AAA
Saturday, April 27, 2019
roots of literacy, writing systems, society's changes that follow
Saturday, March 30, 2019
since 2012, the "Great Pompeii Project"
Friday, January 18, 2019
your language shapes what you pay attention to (or you are blind to)
Monday, August 6, 2018
online course to see the length and breadth of Cross-cultural Methods
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Looking for Iron Age locations
The dry summer days show off structures ordinarily not visible at ground level, or even like this from the air when all is well watered at other seasons and even during the summer of a typical rainfall year. Here are a few structures in the vicinity of Eire's giant New Grange stone building of millennia ago, https://www.flickr.com/photos/mythicalireland/41635425520/in/explore-2018-07-16/
No doubt these will contribute to the mapped locations and finds across the hilltops through the British Isles around the time that implements and weapons of iron overtook the weaker points of bronze (admixing copper with tin) and before that the artifacts of copper alone.
I was at the centre of a major archaeological discovery in the Boyne Valley last week. Using a drone, I found a massive crop mark which is believed to be the footprint of a huge late Neolithic henge or enclosure. I was flying with Ken Williams at the time. The markings are only visible because of the prolonged drought in the area. | |
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
anthro eye in the private sector - seeing what people say & do
https://www.marketplace.org/shows/marketplace-morning-report/06262018-us-edition
Sunday, June 10, 2018
ancient role of grandmothering - radio story, June 2018
Babysitters, tuber-diggers: Studies show the rise of grandmas helped babies thrive — and evolve
For decades, a "man the hunter" theory of early humans prevailed, with the image of societies and interactions revolving around bagging big game. But new research suggests that women likely brought home a lot more food. When grandmothers were added to the mix, babies ate better and may have developed better social skills to manage their multiple caregivers.
"Human children are adapted for cooperation … in ways that apes aren't," says a psychologist.
Thursday, February 15, 2018
thinking like an anthropologist - why? how?
Early February release of "How to Think like an Anthropologists" by Matthew Engelke.
Radio segment discussion by Barbara J. King, http://wuwm.com/post/how-think-anthropologist-and-why-you-should-want
wuwm.com Civilization originated in the Fertile Crescent region, including parts of modern-day Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and Egypt. That's the |
and screenshot attached from eBook page with cover and blurb.
Thanks to author Engelke for bringing anthro to wider and wider audiences!
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
film - So Long Asleep: bringing some of the 1940s forced laborers' mortal remains back to Korea
---[Pr. David Plath writes, 6/2017]
So Long Asleep (60 minutes) follows an international team of East Asian volunteers as they excavate, preserve and repatriate the remains of Korean men who died doing slave labor in Hokkaido during the Asia-Pacific War. On the 70th anniversary of the end of the war we travel with them as they carry 115 sets of remains on a pilgrimage across Japan and over to Korea for reinterment in the Seoul Municipal Cemetery. Using a dark past to shape a brighter shared future the project offers an upbeat model for remembrance and reconciliation that could be adapted widely.
The film and the repatriation project are featured in a 4-page special segment of the Spring 2017 issue of Education About Asia.
See the DER website to view a trailer. Dialogue is in English, Korean and Japanese; in the DER edition the dialogue carries English subtitles. Separately, project participants have prepared editions with subtitles in Korean and in Japanese. For the Korean version, contact Professor Byung-Ho Chung (bhc0606at gmail) and for Japanese contact Professor Song Ki-Chan (kichans at hotmail).
An extended essay by Pr. Chung about the project appears in Asia-Pacific Journal; Japan Focus online magazine, as well, http://apjjf.org/2017/12/Chung.html
apjjf.org 1. Excavation. A chance encounter drew me into the work of excavation and repatriation of the remains of Korean forced labor victims in Hokkaido. |
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Sonic Japan - audio recordings around the society
Sound recordings bring listeners up close to the immediacy of the context and events at hand. The Sonic Japan project has collected a variety of settings to let you explore the many cultural places around the society and language of the Japanese islands. Thanks to the initiative of colleagues in Australia, Japan, and the USA, this project has taken full form. Details of method, funding, contributors and links to follow via Twitter, Facebook, or the collection itself at Soundcloud can be found at http://sonicjapan.clab.org.au/
soundcloud.com Sonic Japan is a collection of sound recordings made in Japan that enables listeners to traverse an array of themes pertaining to everyday life through a ... |
Thursday, January 12, 2017
accents on website, finding yourself
There are many websites that exist just to stoke your curiosity. Localingual is one of them.
Land on the website and a colorful world map takes up your screen. There is no mention of what exactly this map is for, but let your mouse travel around the map and ratchet up your speakers. Travel to any country in the world and listen to the unique accents of that country!
The website came from the mind of a world traveler. David Ding is a former Microsoft engineer fascinated by dialects and languages. His backpacking trips allow him to experience both. So he took this interest and started the site as an encyclopedia for languages:
My dream for this site is for it to become the Wikipedia of languages and dialects spoken around the world.
...[truncated]
Monday, February 22, 2016
marking languages still vigorous today
Wednesday, February 3, 2016
reckoning time - swap from Julian to Gregorian calendar
Thursday, January 14, 2016
anthropology articles getting into news media
A Pattern to Ponder: Perusing the data, readers will note that archeologists and biological anthropologists tend to be cited in the media more than cultural anthropologists. One likely reason derives from the journals the discipline's subfields publish in. Cultural anthropologists tend to publish in a set of sub-field journals. Archeologists and biological anthropologists tend to publish in more interdisciplinary journals leading, in turn, to a wider distribution and more attention paid to their articles. There is no reason why cultural anthropologists could not publish in PlusOne, Science, or Nature. But many prefer publishing in the American Anthropologist, American Ethnologist or Cultural Anthropology thereby attracting limited attention from those beyond their sub-field. Current Anthropology, which crosses the discipline's sub-fields, tends to attract less attention than inter-disciplinary journals', but comparatively more attention than the American Anthropological Associations journals, focused on specific sub-fields.
-source page, http://metrics.publicanthropology.org/collected.php
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
context – 6 photographers make 6 different portraits
Perhaps the same contextual framing and predisposition affects documentary projects, archival work, ethnographic field studies, or transposing a biographical sketch from one language to another for readers of a different culture or era. In other words, if the lens can stand for a perceptual grasp of a subject, then the same assumptions that these photographers baked into their choice of composition and lighting and shutter release also may reveal how one goes about engaging with the world in general: we prejudge people and settings, we view the world as half-empty instead of half-full, for example; or at the time of middle age we feel that so many opportunities remain, rather than feeling that so few days are left before extinction.
And while this portrait experiment misled the photographers who were doing their very best creative work to interpret the man, based on the sparse backstory provided, the end result of this decoy experiment powerfully demonstrates to journalists, archaeologists and other scientists (predisposed with the working theories or hypotheses they bake into their research design and deployment of available methods), philosophers and novelists, as well as social observers of all stripes that assumptions and prior knowledge frame one’s boundaries and the placement of one’s subject within that context.
By extension the frame we paint for our selves (presentation of self; self-image; concept of self) is colored by the assumptions we adopt, discover, aspire to, or have been given by others we know and have been labeled by society more generally.
see the experiment, https://youtu.be/F-TyPfYMDK8 or jump to the time mark showing the resulting portraits
Blurb: A photograph is shaped more by the person behind the camera than by what’s in front of it. To prove this we invited six photographers to a portrait session with a twist. ‘Decoy’ is one of six experiments from The Lab, designed to shift creative thinking behind the lens. [November 2015]
Sunday, May 17, 2015
writing for public, general audiences
without providing a narrative through line, your reader can miss the bigger, brilliant point you are trying to make.
language localism in USA
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
research abstracts on video!
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Fwd: Daily digest for August 3, 2013
Teaching Materials Exchange |
Looking for new ideas and materials for fall term? Check out AAA's new Teaching Materials Exchange. Search by course, syllabus, keyword or even instructor. Or browse through the database of more than 90 syllabi and teaching tools.
Don't forget to submit your materials to share as well.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
music class - bringing in diverse human experiences
While visiting a high school choir class, the anthropologist in me found ways to introduce vocal art to illustrate some of the variety of music expression. Surely there are more or better references to sample, but these came first to mind:
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-(Swiss; USA) yodeling
-(USA) work songs to synchronize group exertions
-(USA) Sacred Harp (shape note singing) in hollow square
-(USA) rapping (cf. Bobby McFerrin vocal percussion)
-(USA) vocal jazz 'scat singing'
-(Scotland) mouth music (imitating instruments)
-(ancient Britain) slaves brought to Imperial Rome: novelty of singing in 3rds
-(Bulgaria) women's chorus singing in 9ths and 7ths
-(Central Asia) Tuva "throat singing"
-song circles for healing
-(India) mantra repetitions
These could be extra-credit assignments for students to report to the class (or in writing to the teacher), for the teacher to playback samples (Wikipedia; Wikimedia), to demonstrate and challenge students to produce each of these.
Friday, November 11, 2011
some cultural anthro - Gifted & Talented
Myth, Self, and Religion (3 MSU Honors Credits)
This course will enable students to explore the mythic quest for meaning, identity, value, and transcendence as seen through religious biography and literary narrative. They will study myth in relation to religious symbols and life-cycle rituals. The course will emphasize a cross-cultural perspective on religious world views and the interpretation of myth as sacred narrative.
For more information on this course, visit the wide-ranging wikispace created by a former REL205 class: http://rel205.wikispaces.com.
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
2010 anthro-day (London, July; Wales, September)
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Monday 30th August- Booking Ahead for Wales Anthropology Day
![]() London Anthropology Day 2010 Photos now Online! ![]() Saturday, January 9, 2010teaching anthro at US Marine Corps Universityhttp://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122362543 [Jan 9, 2010 Nat'l Public Radio, Weekend Edition-Saturday] In Class, Marines Learn Cultural Cost Of Conflict, mp3 audio download The students in front of Paula Holmes-Eber wear camouflage and have close-cropped hair. Most of them are Marine officers, and many of them have already been to war in Iraq and Afghanistan. They're here to learn the consequences of their actions. "Should we change another culture?" she asks the class. "The reality is, the second you land on the ground with 100,000 troops eating and using the materials of the area, you've changed the economy; you've changed the environment." "It's not should we," she tells them, "it's what are we doing — and is that what we want to be doing?" An anthropologist, Holmes-Eber trains American warriors to be sensitive to other cultures. She teaches operational culture at Marine Corps University in Quantico, Va. It's her job to get soldiers to think through how every move they make on the battlefield has a consequence — not just for enemy forces, but for ordinary people. [elipsis]
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