This Anthro Life

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 172:33:09
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Sinopsis

This Anthro Life is an Anthropology podcast centered on crowdsourcing the Human Condition. Every other week we bring you a round-table conversation offering a unique cross cultural and time spanning perspective on all things people, from objects and ideas to the countless possibilities encountered in everyday global life. From producers Adam Gamwell and Ryan Collins in Boston, MA. Become a supporter of this podcast:https://anchor.fm/this-anthro-life/support

Episodios

  • FreeThink #4: On Art, Creativity, and Bringing Awe back to Anthropology

    15/03/2017 Duración: 38min

    As you may have noticed, TAL has been on a bit of a break from releasing new episodes. But, the good news is that we have not been idle. The other night when Ryan and Adam were out and about they got to talking about TAL and their perspectives on public anthropology. What does the future hold? What inspires change? Realizing they were on to something good, they pulled out a phone and hit record. This episode is what came out. We hope you’ll enjoy! This episode was recorded live and near a kitchen so please forgive the extra noise :). In this FreeThink Ryan and Adam get a little personal, shedding light on their own stories, views on art, religion, creative writing, literature, and what it is that drives the team to do anthropology.“Human Being is an art, and we gotta dig into that” – Adam--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Investigating the Untethered Journey between Psychedelic Science, Medicine, and Drug Scheduling with Hamilton Morris

    15/02/2017 Duración: 35min

    Psychedelia is the culture and experiences of psychedelic substances. Where did all the research on psychedelic drugs go? Could psychedelics be used in psychotherapy? How are hallucinogenic drugs used cross-culturally? In this episode of This Anthro Life Adam and Ryan explore the world of psychedelic drugs with Hamilton Morris of Vice’s Hamilton’s Pharmacopeia. We discuss his fieldwork in the Amazon where he hunted for a locally important frog, the potential diagnostic, medicinal, and therapeutic uses of psychedelics, as well as the obstacles in the way of studying human consciousness. Special thanks to Alice Kelikian.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Waiting w/ Serra Hakyemez

    08/02/2017 Duración: 32min

    with Aneil and Ryan Special Guest: Serra HakyemezIs waiting political? Can you cut in line at Starbucks during your hectic morning commute?  In this episode of TAL we team up with Serra Hakyemez, a Junior Research Fellow from the Crown Center for Middle East Studies at Brandeis University to discuss her paper entitled, “Waiting, Acting Political, Hope, Doubt, and Endurance in the Anti-Terrorism Courts of Northern Kurdistan”, which focuses on the ways political detainees’ families are actively shaping and constructing community identities while waiting in the courthouse (Brandeis Anthropology Research Seminar). --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • D+A #2: What Makes a Protest Successful and How do I get involved?

    06/02/2017 Duración: 04min

    Today’s D+A minisode follows last week’s powerful conversation with Jara Connell on protests and people-powered forms of resistance. In this minisode Jara offers us a nugget of wisdom to be cautious about thinking all protests are the same or that we can even evaluate them with the same criteria.TAL D+A Minisodes are short, actionable steps you can take in your everyday life to become more socially savvy, culturally competent and holistic in your actions. If you have any suggestions for D+A minisodes or longer Conversations, drop us a line! We’re always looking for new ideas.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Protesting the Powers that Be and Being the Power that Protests w/ Jara Connell

    01/02/2017 Duración: 27min

     What does mass-protesting accomplish? Does no arrests equate success? Why is protesting disruptive? And more! In this action packed episode of This Anthropological Life, Aneil, Adam, and Ryan talk to Jara Connell about mass protesting and the strategies behind social movements.Who is Jara Connell?Jara is a PhD candidate at Brandeis University. She focuses on race, space, and policing in Saint Louis. Jara’s Master’s thesis dealt with sex and gender politics in Ferguson. When Jara is not advocating for social change and challenging dominant political agendas she takes her cat, Booger, on walks.TwitterLinkedin--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • D+A Minisode 1: How to Deal with Change w/ Dr. Andi Simon

    30/01/2017 Duración: 05min

    Minisodes are finally here! If this is your first TAL Podcast experience, welcome! We recommend you start off with our regular Conversation series – 25ish minute dialogues about everything and anything human – one topic at a time.Design + Application (DnA, get it??) Minisodes are bite-sized actionable insights and social building blocks to help you become more socially savvy, culturally competent, and holistic in thinking and action. With D+A we move from anthropological thinking to anthropological doing. These are 5-10 minute nuggets from our guests on Conversations or inspiring tidbits we come across that you can use in your daily lives. We release these weekly on Monday mornings to give you a boost for the week.To kick things off, Dr. Andi Simon discusses with the TAL team how to deal with change. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • When your Business Stalls, it’s time to Evolve: Unpacking Corporate Anthropology with Dr. Andi Simon

    25/01/2017 Duración: 39min

    How can we make change easier? Do women lead differently from men? What is corporate anthropology? Ryan, Adam, and Aneil are back to answer these questions and more with Dr. Andi Simon. Change is hard, but with Dr. Simon’s toolkit of anthropological knowledge, games, and theater she is able to help businesses change a little easier.We have a copy of Dr. Simon’s great book On the Brink: A Fresh Lens to Take Your Business to New Heights to give away to one lucky listener. How do you do that? Drop us a review on iTunes within a week of this episode release (Released January 25th), and email us with what review you wrote. We’ll pick a lucky winner from the reviewers and send you the book!--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • FreeThink 3: PRX Podcast Garage Meetups, Building Bridges, and Expanding the Podcast

    05/12/2016 Duración: 02min

    Do you need Podcast advice? How is social media transforming the nature of protesting? Can we hatch a good episode out of chickens? Join us in our latest Free Think where we talk upcoming episodes, public anthropology, podcasting, and the future of This Anthropological Life.Links to Check OutAnthro StoryThe Podcast GarageStride and SaunterStanding R--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Don’t Panic! The Neuroscience behind falling into Balance w/ Vivek Pandey Vimal

    23/11/2016 Duración: 28min

    Are balance and movement something that can be culturally shaped? Why aren’t female rats being used in drug studies? In this episode of This Anthropological Life we team up with Vivekanand Pandey Vimal to talk about his research that explores how people learn to balance when their sensory systems are taken away. We then relate studies on balance and movement to anthropology and discuss the importance of multidisciplinary collaboration. Show notes by Nina Oria-Loureiro.Listen to this week’s podcast to learn more aboutVivek’s experimentsRatsCollaborationBalancing on skyscrapersWho is Vivek?Vivekanand Pandey Vimal is a Neuroscience PhD candidate at Brandeis University.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • On Kindness and What the World Needs Now w/ Hannah Brencher

    17/11/2016 Duración: 22min

    Have you ever felt disconnected from your relationships and your life because of your reliance on your phone and social media? Do you ever feel nostalgia for the art of handwriting letters? Hannah Brencher understands what you are feeling. In this episode of This Anthropological Life, we discuss the difficulties of being present, the importance of time in maintaining relationships, the pitfalls of random acts of kindness, and the joys of writing a love letter. Copy Prepared by Nina Oria-LoureiroTake Aways* “The only thing that can beat out fear is love. It can’t be just a statement. It has to be something we live, throug--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Multi-species and non-Human Centered Anthropology: Conversations Revisited

    02/11/2016 Duración: 26min

    Join us for another listen of TAL Conversations favorites on Multi-species and Non-Human Centered Anthropology. Originally aired December 2013, with a follow-up conversation coming soon!Do you have a pet? Do you talk to your pet? How about your house plants? Ever thought about where those vegetables you use as food and bought at the grocery store came from? Like, really came from? “Human Nature”, Anna Tsing writes, “is an interspecies relationship”. It’s never been just about humans; life on this planet (and possibly beyond) is an entanglement of many different kinds of living selves, inert objects, and assemblages of ideas. This week, Adam and Ryan will try to figure out just what the heck this idea might mean and what implications it has for rethinking our connections with and construction of the material and social world.Tune in a very special episode of This Anthropological Life where we take on the very idea of “Human Nature”--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Myths of American Democracy: Contradictions, Troubling Numbers, and Searching for Sense in the System

    20/10/2016 Duración: 26min

    Do you find yourself increasingly frustrated at the lack of real conversations between candidates and politicians? Are you confused about why someone who doesn’t walk to the beat of your life claims to represent the whole of your interests and everyone you know? This episode is not about the candidates, we’ll leave the bashing to them and other pundits. Rather, with this episode we aim to expose some of the mechanisms driving American politics and show different social truths about political systems in general. Join Adam, Aneil, and Ryan as they discuss the debate and informed positions on big questions like “Does my vote, a single vote, matter?”, “What is the role of government?”, and “Have we outgrown our current political system?”--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • FreeThink #2 – Moving Beyond the Mic: On Collaborations and Working Across Disciplines

    19/10/2016 Duración: 17min

    Join Aneil, Adam and Ryan for the second FreeThink episode, where they talk unscripted about upcoming projects and potential interdisciplinary collaborations beyond the mic.FreeThink is a new series of episodes that works like a backstage pass, where we talk unscripted about what’s on our minds and hearts, the nuts and bolts of making a podcast today, and the larger projects we are working on surrounding the show. If you’ve never heard This Anthropological Life, we don’t recommend starting with these episodes. check out our more in-depth Conversations series with some of our favorite episodes curated just for you. TaL Best Of (so far…).When you’re ready, we’d love to have you join us here for a deeper dialogue.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Beer Revisited

    13/10/2016 Duración: 56min

    Glad you’re here! Check out some of our favorite episodes in any order and get to know the anthropological life. And, if you’re long-time listeners we hope you’ll enjoy revisiting these gems with us. If you like us, be sure to subscribe and visit our previous episodes on the downloads page.Episode: 10 Beer Though we made this episode two years ago and the quality is not what we do now but in terms of content its one of our all time favorites. We cover some of the historical uses of beer, its changing meaning over time, the development of taste, and perhaps even share a few ancient recipes! From contemporary hipster cans to drinks of ancient Egyptian Pharaohs you don’t want to miss this episode! Cheers, Prost, Salud, Allinta Qali!45 

  • FreeThink #1: TaL Back in the Studio! What’s Next??

    10/10/2016 Duración: 15min

    Adam, Aneil, and Ryan are all back in the TaL studio for the first time in 18 months! And it feels good. Today we talk shop about where we’ve been and where we’re going with TaL. Check out the conversation on evolving the show content with new episode lengths and direction (same great content, shorter, more-digestible bites) and new minisodes based on Adam’s growing obsession with design and applied anthropology offering you practical ways to apply anthropological thinking and action to your daily life, and professionalizing our craft with new partnerships with the American Anthropological Association among others!We’re super excited to be back for you and can’t wait to build this new season along with you!--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Is Corporate Anthropology Selling Out? A Conversation on Consulting with Vyjayanthi Vadrevu

    19/07/2016 Duración: 54min

    We’re stoked to bring you TAL’s first ever three-city episode! Join Adam (in Peru!) and Ryan (in Boston!) and special guest Vyjayanthi Vadrevu (somewhere between NYC and Austin!) for an in-depth look into the world of Anthropological Consulting and Strategy.What is anthropology like in the business world? Vyjayanthi runs an anthropological consulting company (Rasa.nyc) that draws on social science and design to help companies better communicate and connect with their customers.We dive into questions such as who can call themselves an anthropologist (academic, corporate, podcasters?!), what does a consulting anthropological project look like, what makes up anthropological research, and is client-based ethnography anthropology selling out?--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Making Sense of Finance: Boundaries, Institutions, and Power with Caitlin Zaloom

    12/06/2016 Duración: 32min

    Join TaL’s Aneil Tripathy and Caitlin Zaloom, NYU Associate Professor of Social and Cultural Analysis, as they discuss Zaloom’s research on futures markets and most recently student debt. Hear about what initially drew Zaloom to study financial markets in Chicago and London.Professor Zaloom and Aneil end the conversation with a discussion on how anthropologists should speak to our moment in history and the importance of studying powerful institutions. Anthropology’s job is to denaturalize social systems, and it is especially important to do so in elite settings with powerful institutions such as those active in finance.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Guest Podcast: Food Futures: Playing our Way to Conservation? Experimental Economics in the Andean Countryside

    25/05/2016 Duración: 34min

    Special guest podcast from our friends at the Food Futures PodcastCorinna Howland interviews Adam Gamwell about experimental games, or field experiments, which NGOs and economists use to measure when, why, and how people make different kinds of choices. This data, in turn, is used to inform public policy and generate development projects. As part of Adam’s work in Peru, he ran a series of experimental games with Andean farmers for the NGO Bioversity International, to understand what kinds of incentives farmers would need to conserve threatened varieties of quinoa.

  • Stewardship and Heritage: Bringing Archaeology to the Public with Emily Jane Murry

    24/05/2016 Duración: 11min

    Join TAL’s Ryan Collins and Aneil Tripathy as they interview Emily Jane Murry about her work as a publicly engaged archaeologist in Northern Florida with the Florida Public Archaeology Network. Most of us don’t even consider that the world around us is an archaeological treasure trove, with worlds of diverse cultural experiences overlapping in the layers right beneath our feet. As a champion of this cause, bringing archaeology to the public’s attention, Emily works to foster a sense of stewardship to the past precisely because it is so very connected to the social present. Tune in to hear more!--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

  • Faded Paint and Yellowed Photos: On, Image, Inspiration, and Memory with Javier Urcid

    28/03/2016 Duración: 07min

    How does a camera and a deep sense of curiosity lead to a lifetime of archaeological research on ancient peoples, their symbols, art, and writing? Ryan and Aneil are joined by Brandeis University Professor Javier Urcid who shares stories on the serendipity that characterized the beginning of his lifelong passion in anthropology. From Zapotec script to funerary practices, Javier’s interests are focused on the stories that influenced the daily lives of ancient people and reconstructing the few images that remain today. Javier’s story is one of reflection, but on the mysteries that compel so many to dig ever deeper into. Who were past peoples? What were they like? What stories inspired them and can we find traces of them today? Tune in for a very special episode that connects the past to the present on several levels, one of personal growth and discovery.--- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisanthrolife/message

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