Allegra Lab

From Despair To Where? Anthropology, critique, political practice and the case for radical optimism

31 min · 23. nov. 202331 min
episode From Despair To Where? Anthropology, critique, political practice and the case for radical optimism cover

Description

An audio essay by Ian M. Cook with anthropologists who have gone beyond critique for critique's sake. Anthropologists who have creatively intervened in the world in ways that blur the scholar/activist categories and centre anthropology's tentative, non-absolutist mode of knowledge creation. The essay argues that the attempts at political practice by anthropologists, combined with the work of those who critique the international organisations and social movements that actively seek to intervene in the world, so that their their interventions might be more effective in achieving social justice, can help create and structure the conditions for critical radical optimism to emerge. Transcript: https://allegralaboratory.net/from-despair-to-where-anthropology-critique-political-practice-and-the-case-for-radical-optimism/ Featuring (in order of a-hear-ance) Agathe Mora Julie Billaud Jane Cowan Noah Walker-Crawford Matthew C. Canfield Lieselotte Viaene Rafael Carrano Lelis Samuel Shapiro Pedro Silva Rocha Lima

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Allegra Lab community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts
Get Started

All episodes

40 episodes

episode From Despair To Where? Anthropology, critique, political practice and the case for radical optimism artwork

From Despair To Where? Anthropology, critique, political practice and the case for radical optimism

An audio essay by Ian M. Cook with anthropologists who have gone beyond critique for critique's sake. Anthropologists who have creatively intervened in the world in ways that blur the scholar/activist categories and centre anthropology's tentative, non-absolutist mode of knowledge creation. The essay argues that the attempts at political practice by anthropologists, combined with the work of those who critique the international organisations and social movements that actively seek to intervene in the world, so that their their interventions might be more effective in achieving social justice, can help create and structure the conditions for critical radical optimism to emerge. Transcript: https://allegralaboratory.net/from-despair-to-where-anthropology-critique-political-practice-and-the-case-for-radical-optimism/ Featuring (in order of a-hear-ance) Agathe Mora Julie Billaud Jane Cowan Noah Walker-Crawford Matthew C. Canfield Lieselotte Viaene Rafael Carrano Lelis Samuel Shapiro Pedro Silva Rocha Lima

23. nov. 202331 min