Ethno::log
 :: Sonner la cloche anthropologique :: Ringing the anthropological bell ::
:: Die ethnologische Glocke läuten :: Tocar la campana antropológica ::

Ugh!


Waradauti Drummer now! Mawingu Dancer now! orangemcm. Herbalist now! pachulke2 Herdsman now! truffaldino Dancer now!

;-)


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African Culture and the Zoo in the 21st Century: Report on the 'African Village' in Augsburg


Public lecture held at Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Halle/Saale on Thursday, 14.07.05, 13.00h

Report authors: Nina Glick Schiller, Data Dea and Markus Höhne Speaker: Nina Glick Schiller and Markus Höhne

Abstract: The announcement by the zoo in Augsburg Germany that it was hosting an “African Village” set off a wave of controversy that received widespread media coverage. A global protest developed, fueled by the rapidity of e-mail communication, with concern voiced by African-German organizations, rights organizations, academic associations, a Nobel Prize winner, and concerned individuals from many countries. This report is based on attendance at the four day event, the “African Village” in the zoo from 9 June to 12 June 2005 and interviews with the various participants. Our findings are as follows:

  1. The event was not a village displaying people but a market in the zoo augmented by African singing, drumming, and “oriental” belly dancing.
  2. The event was organized primarily to earn revenue for the zoo, the promotion company, and the exhibitors and performers.
  3. The event organizers linked the zoo and Africans in an endeavor to attract visitors by an “exotic” event; they perceived the zoo with its “African panorama” as a perfect environment for an African fair.
  4. Solidarity with African people and mutual understanding were not primary aims of the event.
  5. After visiting the zoo, visitors frequently linked Africa, Africans, wild animals and nature.
  6. Organizers and visitors were not racist but they participated in and reflected a process that has been called racialization: the daily and often taken-for-granted means by which humans are separated into supposedly biologically based and unequal categories.
  7. The questions raised by protestors about the “African Village” in the zoo took the defenders of the event by surprise; the defenders equated racism with the atrocities of Nazism and attacks on Jews, Sinti and Roma and did not reflect critically on problems dating from German colonialism.
  8. Images dating from those times contribute to contemporary exoticizing, eroticizing, or stereotyping of Africans and are sometimes promoted as multiculturalism.
  9. Against this background the Augsburg zoo was an inappropriate setting to hold a market of African crafts together with forms of “traditional” African cultural performance.
  10. The African exhibitors and performers bore the greatest financial risk and some felt exploited by the particular circumstances of the event; however in a situation of high unemployment and unequal power, they rely on the marketing of cultural difference.
  11. The promotion of zoos through special events relating African culture, people and animals is not a phenomena limited to Augsburg or Germany; it is found also in other European and US zoos. In the current global economy when marketing of difference is big business and when educational institutions such as zoos need to generate more revenues, there are incentives toward racialization.
  12. The racialization processes facilitated by the Augsburg zoo and other zoos are not benign because they can lay the ground work for discrimination, barriers to social mobility, persecution, and repression.
    Full Report .pdf 1,5 MB

Location: Main Seminar Room Advokatenweg 36, 06114 Halle/Saale


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The Death of Culture at the Shores of Hawai’i? The Sahlins-Obeyesekere-Debate reconsidered


Public lecture held at Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Halle/Saale on Monday, 11.07.05 at 16.15h

Speaker: Karsten Kumoll, Institut für Soziologie, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg

Abstract: Within some branches of sociological theory, the “social” seems to have been redefined as the “cultural” during the last decades. Furthermore, within historical studies concepts like “the new cultural history” and “historical anthropology” have become increasingly influential since the 1980s. One important source of this “cultural turn” within sociology and history is American cultural anthropology. However, within anthropology itself cultural theories, in particular “classical” concepts developed by Clifford Geertz and Marshall Sahlins, have been seriously questioned from a rather postmodern perspective and from the perspective of British social anthropology. These critiques have been useful in directing the scholarly attention to some weaknesses of the culture concept. Do these critiques imply, however, that we should do social research “beyond the cultural turn” without “classical” anthropological theories of culture or even without the concept of “culture” itself? In reconsidering the so-called “Sahlins-Obeyesekere-debate” about the death of James Cook at Hawaii 1779 I will address this question. In discussing methodological, epistemological and conceptual key issues of this debate, I will argue that any study at the intersection of history and anthropology investigating colonial worlds has to face the conceptual key issues of the Sahlins-Obeyesekere-debate. These key issues are deeply intertwined with the concept of culture. While some of the critiques against the culture concepts are justifiable and indeed fruitful, abandoning the anthropological concept of culture does not solve the conceptual problems surrounding the death of James Cook at Hawai’i 1779. I will argue that a non-relativistic theory of culture incorporating new sociological accounts of structure and social action will be most fruitful in this respect.

Location: Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Main Seminar Room Advokatenweg 36 06114 Halle/Saale


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