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Ethnographic Imagination Basel (EIB) – a series on reimagining the world from the mundane – is produced by the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel. It is a research, educational, and public engagement initiative exploring innovative forms of political imagination through ethnographic practice. The podcast promotes ethnography not only as a tool of scholarly research but also as a mode of imagination available to all, a means for pursuing deeper intercultural, contextual understanding and more ethical ways of being in the world.

Ethnographic Imagination Basel Basel Social Anthropology

    • Wissenschaft

Ethnographic Imagination Basel (EIB) – a series on reimagining the world from the mundane – is produced by the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel. It is a research, educational, and public engagement initiative exploring innovative forms of political imagination through ethnographic practice. The podcast promotes ethnography not only as a tool of scholarly research but also as a mode of imagination available to all, a means for pursuing deeper intercultural, contextual understanding and more ethical ways of being in the world.

    On Materiality - with Carine Ayélé Durand

    On Materiality - with Carine Ayélé Durand

    What can be gained from discussing Materiality, as opposed to simply talking about objects? This episode, On Materiality, examines what it means to engage with objects, substances, and textures. We contemplate the more profound implications of our relationship with things, how we can think through them, and how this connects to the work of political imagination. Our guest, Carine Ayélé Durand, is Director of Musée d'Ethnographie, Genève,  whose curatorial and academic work involves collaborations with indigenous groups in the Arctic, the Brazilian Amazon and Canada to rethink engagements with material culture, visual arts, and museum exhibitions.

     

    Some of Durand’s essays include “Artistic Practice and (Museum) Ethnography” (2010); “Anthropology in a Glass Case: Indigeneity, Collaboration, and Artistic Practice in Museums (2010); “Indexing (In)Authenticity: Art and Artefact in Ethnography Museums” (2012); and “Redefining Curatorship as Skilled Practice” (2023).

    Host: George Paul Meiu, Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.

    Production: Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern ( Institute of Social Anthropology) in collaboration with the New Media Center at the University of Basel.

    • 28 Min.
    On Diaspora - with Ghassan Hage

    On Diaspora - with Ghassan Hage

    What does it mean to live in a world defined by mobility, a world where the here and now are also so centrally defined multiple elsewheres? 

    In this episode, On Diaspora, our guest, Ghassan Hage, distinguished professor of Anthropology and Social Theory at the University of Melbourne, Australia, engages in a thought-provoking discussion of the concept of diaspora.

    Hage brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to this complex subject. In the recent book, The Diasporic Condition: Ethnographic Explorations of the Lebanese in the World (2021), Hage explores innovative perspectives that challenge conventional notions of living in a lifeworld where the boundaries of location extend beyond mere spatial and temporal distances.

     

    Hage, a fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, has published a vast number collection of works, including White Nation (1998); Against Paranoid Nationalism (2003);  After-Politics: Critical Anthropology and the Radical Imagination (2015); and Is Racism an Environmental Threat? (2017).

     #diaspora #migration #ethnographicimaginationbasel #anthropology

    Host:

    George Paul Meiu, Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.

    Production: 

    Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Institute of Social Anthropology) in collaboration with the New Media Center at the University of Basel

    • 33 Min.
    On Listening–with Mwenda Ntarangwi

    On Listening–with Mwenda Ntarangwi

    How do we approach listening, as a mode of perception? How can we be attentive to what others say? Not so much to respond, but in order to understand. In today's episode, On Listening, our guest is Mwenda Ntarangwi, a cultural anthropologist who has taught in the USA, in Kenya and is currently working with the National Defense University in Kenya. 

    Ntarangwi has explored questions of listening, perception, and its engagement in knowledge production across his work in Kenya and the USA. Some of his publications include Gender Identity and Performance: Understanding of Swahili Cultural Realities Through Songs (2003); East African Hip Hop: Youth Culture and Globalization (2009), Reversed Gaze: An African Ethnography of American Anthropology (2010), and The Street is My Pulpit: Hip Hop and Christianity in Kenya (2016). Our conversation focuses on his article “Listening to Disrupt Ethnographic Representations” (2021), published in HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. 

    Host: George Paul Meiu is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.
    Production: 
    Ethnographic Imagination Basel:  Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Ethnologisches Seminar Universität Basel) in collaboration with the New Media Center

    #listening #ethnographicimaginationbasel #anthropology #baselsocialanthropology

    • 32 Min.
    On Dance–with Hélène Neveu Kringelbach and Lesley Nicole Braun

    On Dance–with Hélène Neveu Kringelbach and Lesley Nicole Braun

    This episode hosts two guests in a conversation about how dancing encompasses the elements of our changing worlds and allows us to act upon that world. 

    Hélène Neveu Kringelbach is an Associate Professor of African Anthropology at University College London. Her research has focused on the lives and works of dancers and musicians on migration and effective relationships by national and transnational families in Senegal and France. Kringelbach is author of Dance Circles: Movement Morality and Self-fashioning in Urban Senegal (2013).

    Lesley Braun, Associate Researcher at the Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Basel and has worked among women concert dancers in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Braun's research explores dance, gender, transnational mobility in women's sexuality and trade in the Democratic Republic of Congo. She is author of Congo's Dancers: Women and Work in Kinshasa (2023). 

    Host: George Paul Meiu is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.
    Production: Ethnographic Imagination Basel: 
    Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Ethnologisches Seminar Universität Basel) 
    in collaboration with the New Media Center


    #dance #senegal #congo #DRC #ethnographicimaginationbasel #anthropology

    • 41 Min.
    On Birth/ing–with Stephen Okumu Ombere

    On Birth/ing–with Stephen Okumu Ombere

    This episode "On Birth/ing" features Stephen Okumu Ombere, Professor of Anthropology at Maseno University in Kisumu, Kenya. Ombere has researched birth in relation to medicalization, social assistance programs, and various cultural practices related to giving birth and motherhood. He is author of two monographs: Socio-cultural Context of Circumcised Men's Sexual Behaviour in Kenya (2015) and Local Perceptions of Social Protection Schemes in Maternal Health in Kenya: Ethnography in Coastal Kenya (PhD dissertation at the University of Bern, 2018). Stephen has also authored and co-authored articles applying a medical anthropology perspective to a wide variety of topics, including circumcision, HIV/AIDS, maternal health, and children’s vulnerability to sexual abuse.

    Host: George Paul Meiu is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.
    Production:
    Ethnographic Imagination Basel: Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Ethnologisches Seminar Universität Basel)
    in collaboration with the New Media Center

    • 30 Min.
    On Memory–with Jennifer Cole

    On Memory–with Jennifer Cole

    How and why are some things remembered and forgotten in different social and political contexts? Joining us on this episode, On Memory, is Jennifer Cole, Professor and Chair, Department of Comparative Human Development and Chair, Committee on African Studies, University of Chicago. Her work on Colonialism, rituals and ancestors in rural Madagascar has been centered on individual and collective memories. Some of her publications include Forget Colonialism? Sacrifice and the Art of Memory in Madagascar (University of California Press 2001), Sex and Salvation: Imagining the Future in Madagascar (University of Chicago Press, 2010)



    Host: George Paul Meiu is Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Institute of Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.

    Production: 

    Ethnographic Imagination Basel: Zainabu Jallo, Ann Karimi Kern (Ethnologisches Seminar Universität Basel) 

    in collaboration with the New Media Center

    #memory #madagascar #ethnographicimaginationbasel #anthropology

    • 33 Min.

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