NPR recently covered two of Professor Randall White’s new articles on the discovery of 38,000 year old rock engravings, which is older “than the famous images at both Lascaux and Chauvet caves.”
Read NPR’s coverage of Prof. White’s findings, here.
On Saturday, February 4th, 2017, several students from the Department led by Professor Jerome Whitington, participated in a Data Rescue event designed to archive and protect several websites on climate change, environmental data, and energy usage that could be threatened by our current Trump administration. Below is a statement from Professor Whitington detailing the success of the event:
“[The event] went off extremely well – about 160 people were involved, we archived a lot of federal websites and data especially from the Dept of Energy and Dept of Interior, and some other important work as well.It’s pretty heartening to see so many people engaged with environmental information and regulatory systems to such a degree of detail. Notably, we hosted a meeting among some key librarians around the country. It seems university librarians have been discussing a plan to systematically archive government data for about two decades, and some work has been done but there has never been a push to actually get it running. Due to the popular demand for this, there is now a movement for big libraries to create trusted data reserves linked in with their indexing systems. If this comes online it will be a very big win for us.”
The event was also covered extensively in the press. You can read articles about it here, here, here, and here.
“An international team of anthropologists has uncovered a 38,000-year-old engraved image in a southwestern French rockshelter—a finding that marks some of the earliest known graphic imagery found in Western Eurasia.” Professor Randall White, of the NYU Department of Anthropology and the Center for the Study of Human Origins, contributed to the findings. You can read more about the discoveries, here.
The Department of Anthropology at NYU, particularly Jerome Whitington, assisted in efforts to rescue climate change data from being purged by the Trump Administration on the EPA’s website. You can read more about their efforts in rescuing this data, here.
The Department of Anthropology is thrilled to congratulate Professor Sonia Das on the release of her new monograph entitled Linguistic Rivalries: Tamil Migrants and Anglo-Franco Conflicts published by Oxford University Press. Please read more about Sonia and her book here. \
Congratulations, Sonia!
Professor Faye Ginsburg and Professor Rayna Rapp contributed to the online HotSpots section of the journal Cultural Anthropology, commenting on the interplay of disability and politics in the 2016 US Presidential Election. The piece can be read in full here and provides an illuminating examination of the ways disability has been talked about and represented during this unprecedented election season.
Congratulations to Faye and Rayna!
Professor Fred Myers and Doctoral Student Desiree Baron have been awarded the 3rd annual Miriam K. Chamberlain award! The Miriam K. Chamberlain award is presented by the International Center for Research on Women, and goes to scholars who’s research “exemplify Mariam’s commitment to mentorship in support of women’s high-level scholarly achievement.”
You can read more about Desiree and Fred’s research, here.
Congratulations to Desiree and Fred!
Professor Emily martin recently contributed to a new piece entitled “This New Sex Science Changes Everything.” Check out the article here, and watch Emily speak in the video below!
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:
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.
The Anthropology Department is thrilled to announce that two of our faculty members, Shara Bailey and Scott Williams, have received Golden Dozen Teaching Awards for 2015-2016! The Golden Dozen Teaching Award is awarded in recognition of excellence in undergraduate teaching. Congratulations to Shara and Scott!