“WE” did not make up the concept of race. White supremacists did.


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“WE” did not make up the concept of race. White supremacists did.

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So the thing about crossing cultures is that you have to be willing to fail and mess up and be embarrassed and 100% vulnerable to your own ignorance.
I feel like these videos sometimes get a bad rep in the social sciences because, yeah, internet and social experiments was pretty messed up and an utter failure, so I definitely get the defense and the organizing of the chaos. But at the end of the day, people who are willing to stand up and display their culture for others who are less exposed to it, create a connection and an experience without being a token anything. They are each in a position of awkward confrontation of themselves as the familiar or the other, and I think that kind of public access and awareness of anth is extremely important.
How do we make culture accessible to people as a general part of education?
Well, until we figure out how to value it and implement anthropological concepts in education, projects like WatchCut and National Geographic are the most readily available thing, and I don’t know if we can hate them or criticize them for doing our job (but obviously, we can still critique them and encourage growth and direction).
i can't stop laughing at my anthropology class...
homo erectus is fun
classic Frankenstein plots so pervasive in Western narratives lack resonance in Japan, a country where the bond between an artisan and his tools has deeper, enduring roots. Tools are revered in Japan not because they are "alive," but because they are an extension of the craftsman's body. Through daily use, a worker infuses his tools with his soul so that they acquire a kind of life of their own.
Christal Whelan analyses Japan's deep fascination with robots in The Daily Yomiuri.

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