AnthroPod
by Society for Cultural AnthropologyAnthroPod is produced by the Society for Cultural Anthropology. In each episode, we explore what anthropology teaches us about the world and people around us.
Copyright: All rights reserved
Episodes
45. (W)Rap on Race
35m · Published
“(W)Rap On: Race” features anthropologist Shalini Shankar discussing race, social activism, and pedagogy with Black Lives Matter activist DeRay McKesson. Christien Tompkins moderates the conversation.
(W)Rap on Race is the inaugural episode of the new (W)Rap On series at AnthroPod, which brings anthropologists into conversation with artists, activists, and scholars from other disciplines and perspectives. The series is loosely inspired by James Baldwin and Margaret Mead’s 1971 conversation Rap on Race. Yet the format attempts to identify and confront some of the inherent problems that this conversation embodied and only further crystallized, such as white fragility, difficulties with confronting complicity in larger power structures, and struggles to create space for different groups to speak openly (instead of being spoken over or spoken for).
Our goal for this series is to provide a platform for thoughtful and incisive discussions that highlight solidarities and shared commitments but also, and perhaps more importantly, highlight where frictions might emerge between anthropological approaches and those of different disciplines or of work outside the academy.
44. Sounds of Economic Collapse in Egypt
26m · Published
Maria Frederika Malmstrom on the Sound of Economic Collapse in Egypt
43. AnthroPod Crossover: The Familiar Strange with Vijayendra Rao
48m · Published
Vijayendra Rao, an economist with the World Bank, talks with anthropologist Ian Pollock about the theory and practice of development, anthropology’s relationship to development, and how ethnography might help the disenfranchised engage with powerful institutions and effect social change.
AnthroBites: Hunters & Gathers
17m · Published
Graeme Warren explains what we can learn about histories and cultures through Hunter & Gatherer research.
42. Schools, Prisons, and Blackness in America: A Conversation with Damien Sojoyner
57m · Published
Damien Sojoyner on race, education, imprisonment, and their intersection in the United States.
41. Teresa Caldeira on Urban Practices and Ethnographic Intimacy
24m · Published
Teresa Caldeira discusses her recent research on urban practices and forms of cultural production from the peripheries of São Paulo, Brazil that are reshaping public space, including rap music, graffiti, ostentation funk, and pixação
Producer: Liliana Gil
Music: Excerpts from “Soldado Sem Bandeira” by Emicida (00:00, 08:20), “Fim de Semana no Parque” by Racionais MC’s (06:25), a birthday song recorded at the Jardim das Camélias’s Parish Church (14:05), and “Se Identifica” by A’s Trinca (17:20, 23:05). Thanks to the artists for granting permission to use these excerpts in the episode.
AnthroBites: Feminist Anthropology
15m · Published
Christa Craven discusses feminist anthropology in this episode of AnthroBites, the podcast that makes key concepts in anthropology more digestible.
40. Anthropology's Politics: A Conversation with Lara Deeb and Jessica Winegar
44m · Published
Lara Deeb and Jessica Winegar discuss their recent book, Anthropology's Politics: Disciplining the Middle East (2015). They touch on how political and economic pressures shape how U.S.-based scholars research and teach about the Middle East, how certain topics and regions are embraced or pushed back on, and how those pressures and incentives impact scholars working in the Middle East from graduate school to teaching and public engagement.
Producer: Beth Derderian
Music: Sweeter Vermouth by Kevin MacLeod
39. Podcasts and Pedagogy: Audio in the Anthropology Classroom
24m · Published
Angela Jenks shares her approach to anthropological pedagogy and offers thoughtful insights into how anthropologists might begin thinking about how to incorporate podcasts into their syllabi.
38. The Anthropology of Media in a Post-Truth Era
47m · Published
Anthropologists of media and journalism reflect on the current post-truth era in the United States means for research and teaching. This episode features a panel from the the 2017 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association with Naomi Schiller, Robert Samet, Natalia Roudakova, Alexandra Juhasz, Amahl Bishara, and Faye Ginsburg.
Music: “Bit Rio” and “Caravan” by Podington Bear
AnthroPod has 79 episodes in total of non- explicit content. Total playtime is 57:42:20. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 22nd 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on April 23rd, 2024 06:10.
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