All posts by Samuel Rolfe

Fred Myers Organizes Workshop at NYU Sydney

MIchelle Kelly (WSU), Anna Antoniak (NYU-Sydney), Sarah Naderi (NYU Sydney), Fred Myers (NYU), and Tim Rowse (WSU) in the theater of Science House, NYU Sydney.
Michelle Kelly (WSU), Anna Antoniak (NYU-Sydney), Sarah Naderi (NYU Sydney), Fred Myers (NYU), and Tim Rowse (WSU) in the theater of Science House, NYU Sydney.

During two days in July, Professor Fred Myers (NYU) and Tim Rowse (Western Sydney University) convened a workshop at NYU’s beautiful Sydney site, funded by the Australian Research Council as part of a Discovery Project Grant.  Entitled “Australian Cultural Fields: the Difference that Identity Makes,” the workshop had 21 presenters and focused on Indigeneity across several different Australian fields of cutlural production — Sport, Media, Visual Arts, Music, Heritage — and one paper on Taste.  The presenters included academic presentations and also practitioners’ reflections in recognition of the importance of participant knowledge of the fields in which they work.  Some of the participants skyped in, but the technology did not fail!!!  Professor Faye Ginsburg skyped in from New York, and PhD student Rowena Potts was able to attend in person.  It was a fabulous event and a wonderful coordination between NYU Sydney and Western Sydney University, the home of the research project.  We want to thank the staff at NYU Sydney for all of their support and hospitality and the research manager of the project, Dr. Michelle Kelly for coordinating.

The rationale for the workshop was framed explicitly

“We hope that participants will be able to present and share their experience of participating in these fields and their knowledge about how such fields operate. We will draw on social theory, but our workshop will be animated by personal experience and intimate knowledge of working in these fields.

We believe it is important to think about the terms, within these five Australian cultural fields, in which the Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction is recognised – whether in terms of Indigenous cultural producers or Indigenous cultural works.

In each of the above five fields of Australian culture, it now makes a difference whether a sportsperson, network, monument, artwork or performance is known as ‘Indigenous’. Indeed, people have, at times, made a great effort to assert that ‘Australian’ culture has Indigenous and non-Indigenous variants – that is, to make ’the Indigenous’ visible, to challenge habits of thought that allowed ‘the Indigenous’ to be repressed from sight and from memory. To assert the relevance of the Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction has been, at times, a passionate political cause.
However, the politics of this ‘difference’ is never simple, and it is clear that power and domination are characteristics of each of these five fields.  We think it may be useful to ask such questions as:

  • In what terms are we being asked to imagine ‘the Indigenous’ as different?
  • Why are some representations of ‘Indigeneity’ controversial and others easily accepted?
  • When an Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction is made, what is implied about the ‘non-Indigenous’?
  • Whose interests are served by sustaining any particular version of the Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction?
  • What institutions are built upon (invested in) the deployment of any way of making the Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction?
  • Are there circumstances in which it is better not to assert the Indigenous/non-Indigenous distinction? Is this a question of tactics, as agents (athletes, artists, critics, curators, sponsors) manoeuvre through fields of cultural production?

To pose these questions (and any other questions that participants wish to raise) is to adopt a critical, politically aware approach to the politics of identity. We will hear from a variety of speakers, including both university-based and industry-based commentators.

Fred would like want to thank all of the presenters, who took time off from other work to join him and his colleagues.  Friends and colleagues from many years generously agreed to share their thoughts.

2015-2016 Graduate Student Awards!

The Anthropology Department is thrilled to announce that several of our graduate students have received awards and fellowships for 2015-2016! Please see below for the complete list of winners.

Eugenia Kisin is recipient of the 2015-2016 Dean’s Outstanding Dissertation Award in the Social Sciences, which recognizes excellence in the preparation and completion of the Ph.D. dissertation.

Amy Field, Louis Romer and Eli Dollarhide have each been awarded the 2015-2016 Dean’s Outstanding Graduate Student Teaching Award in the Social Sciences, which recognizes outstanding teaching by graduate students.

Alex Decasien, Nathan Madson and Schuyler Marquez each received GSAS Predoctoral Summer Fellowships, which are awarded to outstanding doctoral students conducting preliminary dissertation research. The award enables students to visit research sites, such as archival resource facilities, laboratories, and fieldwork locations that will be useful for later dissertation research.

Vijayanka Nair has been awarded the GSAS Dean’s Dissertation Fellowship, which recognizes excellence and exceptional promise in the work of advanced graduate students who are writing their doctoral dissertations.

Sarah Riccardi has been awarded the GSAS Patricia Dunn Lehman Fellowship for summer research, which is given annually to an outstanding advanced doctoral student working toward a dissertation in the field of arts in American society.

Tyler Zoanni has been awarded the GSAS Elaine Brody Fellowship for the Humanities, which recognizes excellence and exceptional promise in the work of graduate students who are conducting doctoral dissertation research.

DOCS ON THE EDGE: A Student Documentary Showcase

2016_POSTER_FINAL (2)
Please join us for our annual screening of new student documentaries from the NYU Culture & Media Program! And please spread the word to your students and colleagues!

                                         THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2015 @ 6:00PM

DOCS ON THE EDGE:
A Student Documentary Showcase from
the 2015-2016 Video Production Seminar

Presented by the Department of Anthropology,
the Department of Cinema Studies,
and the Program in Culture and Media
at New York University

Thursday, May 12 @ 6:00 pm

Cantor Film Center
36 East 8th Street
New York City
Theater 200

 

Thiaroye by the Sea

by Devin Thomas

Amidst the urban chaos of Dakar–Senegal’s urban capital–one young woman struggles to find her voice as a rapper as she contends with the pressures of poverty, tradition, and religion.

Shásh Jaa’: Bears Ears

by Angelo Baca

Shásh Jaa’ (Bears Ears) encompasses 1.9 million acres of southeastern Utah wilderness,sacred lands to local Native American tribes. Through the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition, five tribal nations (Navajo, Ute, Ute Mountain Ute, Hopi, Zuni) come together to protect this pristine ecological area from natural resource extraction, development, and environmental destruction. This documentary follows Angelo Baca, the director,  and his grandmother, and the coalition’s efforts to convince the Obama administration to designate Bears Ears a  National Monument in partnership with these tribes.

Island to Island

by Jacqueline Hazen

In the fall of 2015, Kris Kato, an emerging filmmaker, and Keoni DeFranco, the founder of a communications technology company, were initiated as kahu oli, caretakers of Hawaiian chant. Both young men live and work in New York City—but now, with the dual responsibilities to safeguard and to share this indigenous, Hawaiian familial tradition. Island to Island explores how Kris, Keoni and other members of the Hawaiian diaspora community are integrating oli into the sounds of the island of Manhattan.

Archives of Extinction

by Alyse Takayesu

Throughout the 19th century, scientists transformed living birds into dried, stuffed, and otherwise preserved scientific specimens. Today, scientists seek to transform these lifeless specimens into living birds through the emerging science of de-extinction. Exploring these transformations, Archives of Extinction evokes questions about de-animating and reanimating forms of life and about the human role in disassembling and reassembling past and future ecologies.

The Love Industry

by Matthew Cusimano

How does one construct love in the digital world? Filmmaker, Matthew Cusimano, a professional wedding videographer, discovers Lisa Hoehn, a professional online dating profile ghostwriter. Cusimano relates to Hoehn’s exhaustive lifestyle of constructing the romantic stories of strangers and follows Hoehn’s creative process after her first book publication and exposure to the media. As Cusimano and Hoehn reflect on edited romance, Hoehn reveals the struggle with maintaining her own personal relationships and illustrates the complicated role of working in the relationship industry.

The Part of Us that Belongs to God / 属灵方面

by Joseph Livesey

The Part of Us that Belongs to God provides an observational portrait of a typical Monday service at Tianfu United Methodist, offering a window into how Chinese culture and Christian teaching are combined to convey a message of hope for Chinese immigrants in New York City.

The Bearden Project

by Chloe Gbai

In a time where the art world is concerned by the lack of African-American artists on gallery walls, this documentary reflects on one of the great black artists that has been waiting for more recognition, Romare Bearden.

Grounded

by Neta Alexander

Grounded focuses on a Digital Detox weekend retreat in Marble Falls, Texas, where 147 participants  re-live their childhood summer camp experience at “Camp Grounded”. Is it possible to build a community in less than four days? What happens when tech-savvy adults are forced to ask who they are outside the narrow confines of age, occupation, or professional achievements?

Video: The Give and Take of Everyday Life: Conversations in Language and Culture in Honor of Bambi B. Schieffelin

On October 10th, 2015, NYU’s Department of Anthropology was involved in organizing a symposium in recognition of the contributions of Bambi Schieffelin to the fields of cultural and linguistic anthropology. Below are extended clips from that symposium.

Fred Myers and Elinor Ochs

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9A2ZMTPKZ0&feature=youtu.be

 

Gillian Sankoff

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMOwlwTVvoM&feature=youtu.be

 

Joel Robbins and Alessandro Duranti

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GeNDTdiMsw&feature=youtu.be

 

Norma Mendoza-Denton

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xOqVI9wcQU&feature=youtu.be

 

Steven Feld

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8M-AWl_T3og&feature=youtu.be

 

Messages from former students; Presentations by Paul Garrett, Ayala Fader, David Valentine, Shalini Shankar, Jillian Cavanaugh, and Graham Jones; and a special Bambi-edition of Jeopardy

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h3f41NGFG9g&feature=youtu.be