Newsarchiv: Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology
Jahr 2022
International Conference "After Law: Mobilization, Injustice, and Confrontation in the Post-Juristocratic Transition" (6-10 June 2022, Université de Lausanne)
On 6-10 June, Olaf Zenker and Mark Goodale (Université de Lausanne) will host an international conference entitled “After Law: Mobilization, Injustice, and Confrontation in the Post-Juristocratic Transition”. This workshop will take place at the "LACS - Laboratoire d'Anthropolgie Culturelle et Sociale" in Lausanne (Switzerland). After the end of the Cold War, the world experienced an impressive rise of law - especially in the form of liberal constitutionism and a strengthened judicial review - towards a "juristocracy" (Hirschl 2004). However, the last few years have seen a counter-movement increasingly shifting away from the rule of law and towards much more ambiguous forms of self-determination, mobilization and resistance. Are we at the beginning of a "post-juristocratic transition" - and if so, what are its consequences? These questions are at the heart of this interdisciplinary conference.
Further information on the programme can be found in the document below.
Retirement of Prof. Dr. Burkhard Schnepel
After 20 eventful years at Martin Luther University, Prof. Dr. Burkhard Schnepel recently retired with the end of the winter semester 2021/22. As a founding member of the Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology since 2002, he was crucial in establishing Social and Cultural Anthropology at Martin Luther University and in making Halle one of the centres of the discipline beyond Germany. His work was not limited to the Institute, however, as he made a significant contribution to anchoring the discipline at MLU by assuming numerous leading positions. Burkhard Schnepel was Dean of the Faculty of Philosophy I (2010-14), Director of the Oriental Studies Centre (from 2007), co-initiator and founding director of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Regional Studies (from 2009), board member of the graduate school "Asia and Africa", and member of the Senate (2014-18). In addition to his institutional commitment, Burkhard Schnepel also led numerous third-party funded projects on research in South Asia and the Indian Ocean, which were supported by the German Research Foundation, the Fritz Thyssen Foundation, the Volkswagen Foundation, and the Max Planck Society, among others. His research interests include topics such as sacred kingship, theories of ritual and performance, personhood, and cultural heritage. He has also made important contributions to the anthropology of the night and of tourism. The main focus of his research in Halle, however, consisted in ethnohistorical studies, with his research initially focussing on Orissa, India, subsequently including Mauritius, and finally extending to the Indian Ocean. Burkhard Schnepel established Halle as the most important German location for Indian Ocean Studies with international appeal. With his Max Planck Fellow Group "Connectivity in Motion: Port Cities of the Indian Ocean", the organisation of several international and interdisciplinary conferences and summer schools, the cooperation with Utkal University in Orissa, the University of Mauritius, McGill University in Canada and New York University Shanghai, as well as numerous relevant publications on the Indian Ocean, Burkhard Schnepel has contributed significantly to the reputation of Martin Luther University. We would like to express our sincere thanks for his significant commitment to the Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg and to the social sciences and humanities as a whole, and wish him all the best for his well-deserved retirement.
Anton Wilhelm Amo Lecture 2022 on 22th June (in attendance and online)
This year`s Anton Wilhelm Amo Lecture 2022 by Prod. Dr. Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni (Chair in Epistemologies of the Global South, University of Bayreuth) entitled "Genealogies of Decolonization and Tasks of Decoloniality in the 21st Century" will take place on Wednesday, June 22 at 6:15 p.m. in the lecture hall IV (Ludwig-Wucherer-Str. 2, 06108 Halle-Saale). It will also be streamed live at: BIT.LY/AMO-2022 (password: amo-Lecture22). For more information about the event, see the document below.
Just published: The Oxford Handbook of Law and Anthropology
The Oxford Handbook of Law and Anthropology - co-edited by Olaf Zenker with Marie-Claire Foblets (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology), Mark Goodale (University of Lausanne) and Maria Sapignoli (University of Milan) - was recently published. This collection of 49 chapters plus Introduction provides an original and internationally framed conception of the historical, theoretical, and ethnographic interconnections of law and anthropology. Each of the essays in the Handbook provides a survey of the current state of scholarly debate and an argument about the future direction of research in this dynamic and interdisciplinary field. The structure of the Handbook is animated by an overarching collective narrative about how law and anthropology have and should relate to each other as intersecting domains of inquiry that address such fundamental questions as dispute resolution, normative ordering, social organization, and legal, political, and social identity.
You can find out more here about the print edition as well as the online version of this Handbook.
Before the Law - Affective Dynamics in the Digital Transformation of German Immigration Management: An Episode from the Podcast “More than a Feeling - Feelings and Society”
What feelings are at play when a complex, multi-layered and highly politicised process such as immigration to Germany is administered - also and especially on the part of those entrusted with the bureaucratic work? Questions of power and powerlessness are crucial here, as are concerns about the (non-)legality of procedures. Feelings of coldness and harshness, of injustice on both sides, among immigrants and public administrators, as well as bureaucratic sentiments more generally constitute the contested field from which Olaf Zenker and Larissa Vetters (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology) report with regard to their research project "Sentiments of Bureaucracies: Affective Dynamics in the Digital Transformation of German Immigration Management" at the Collaborative Research Centre 1171 "Affective Societies".
You can learn more here about the project, its challenges under pandemic working conditions and what happens to the digitisers when they are digitised.
ETROD: Sandro Mezzadra, “Excavating contemporary capitalism“
ETROD welcomes Sandro Mezzadra (Bologna) to discuss "Excavating contemporary capitalism". If you would like to join this ETROD sessions (at 4pm CEST) please drop a mail to janine.hauer@zirs.uni-halle.de to receive the Zoom link and text. Once registered, you will automatically receive the invitations, links and readings to all upcoming sessions until further notice.
Guest lecture on “Landscape as a framework for research of mythical space” by Dr. Tibor Komar
In this lecture Dr. Tibor Komar will present some results from the project Sacral Interpretation of Landscape which was initially conceived as an interdisciplinary research and evaluation of traces of pre-Christian beliefs that can be found in Croatian toponomastics, topography and oral tradition. Historically, Slavs/Croats, having come on today`s territory, brought along a mythical worldview and tailored it to fit the new landscape. After conversion to Christianity, places where once pagan gods were worshipped were replaced by Christian Saints – the old spirituality and worldview have been adapted to the new situation, some old beliefs and practices have disappeared, some were adapted, and some were preserved to this day. Generally speaking, today we can acquire new findings about the old Slavic religion and mythology from several types of sources - Slavic and Indo-European comparative linguistics (written sources), archaeology (archaeological sources), history (written sources) and ethnology (oral tradition sources). While seeking for traces of ancient Croatian mythology and partially reconstructing the contents of the ancient Slavic religious system by comparing individual Slavic traditions, an attempt was made to place them in the wider Indo-European context. The importance of research was also emphasized through an interdisciplinary analysis of the concept of mythological heritage in the interaction of language material and oral tradition in the process of formation of the Croatian cultural identity. Another aim of this project was to discover a way in which the settled Slavs/Croats physically incorporated their own worldview brought along from their ancient homeland into the newly occupied territory. Inquiries were made to find specific ways in which they named certain points in the landscape (peaks, rivers, rocks, sources, etc.), which made it possible to, at least to some extent, read into the sacral and juridical process of settling a new homeland.
Speaker: Dr. Tibor Komar, Associate Professor at the Department of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Zagreb
Date: 19 April 2022
Time: 4-6 pm
Location: Seminar room at the Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology, Reichardtstraße 11, 06114 Halle (Saale)
Neu erschienen: Unter Uns - Bildproduktion im Mansfelder Land
06.04.2022: Im Sommer 2020 fand das Festival der Werkleitz-Gesellschaft in Hettstedt statt. Unter dem Titel "Unter Uns - Bildproduktion im Mansfelder Land" befassten sich KünstlerInnen und Studierende der der Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg, der Burg Giebichenstein Kunsthochschule Halle und der Hochschule für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig mit dem Leben im Mansfelder Land. Das Seminar für Ethnologie war mit Asta Vonderau vertreten, unter der Leitung von Kati Illmann haben auch Studierende des SfE am Festival teilgenommen. Aus künsterlischen Ideen, wissenschaftlichen Beobachtungen, dem Input von Akteuren vor Ort sowie dem Blick von außen entstand ein tiefgründiges Bild dieser Region. Eine Dokumentation des Festivals , darunter auch Beiträge von Kati Illmann und Ethnologie-Studierenden, ist nun im Mitteldeutschen Verlag erschienen (Oktober 2021, 88 Seiten, 12 Euro).
Beyond the Hinterland and the Sea: A Workshop on the Indian Ocean World
Am 24. und 25. Februar findet der von Dr. Boris Wille mitorganisierte Online-Workshop "Beyond the Hinterland and the Sea: A Workshop on the Indian Ocean World" statt. Dem Workshop geht eine Lecture von Biao Xiang, Direktor des Max-Planck-Instituts für ethnologische Forschung, mit dem Titel "Channels: Small Traders in the Digital Age" voraus. Informationen zum Programm finden sich in dem untenstehenden Dokument.
International Hybrid Conference "Compensation through Expropriation without Compensation? Constitutional Amendment, Land Reform and the Future of Redistributive Justice in South Africa" (17-18 February 2022)
On 17 and 18 February, Olaf Zenker and Cherryl Walker (Stellenbosch University) will host an international hybrid conference entitled "Compensation through Expropriation without Compensation? Constitutional Amendment, Land Reform and the Future of Redistributive Justice in South Africa". This workshop will take place at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS) in Stellenbosch/South Africa and will be simultaneously broadcasted online. Based on the highly politicised debate in South Africa about a possible constitutional amendment aiming at "expropriation without compensation" (albeit only under very rare conditions), the conference will address the question of how the ongoing land reform can be truly made more efficient regarding a comprehensive transformation and and which other, possibly more productive forms of redistributive justice are hereby not sufficiently taken into account. Focussing on the example of South Africa - the post-colony with the greatest social inequality in the world -, local experts will thus debate central questions about the future of redistributive justice, which are also of growing global importance in many other contexts.
The conference will also take place as an online event. Further information on registration and the programme can be found here .
Abschlusspräsentation Masterforschungsprojekte
Mittwoch, 2. Februar 2022, 20:00-22.00 Uhr, online
Wie in jedem Jahr stellen die Studierenden des Masters Ethnologie 120 ihre im vergangenen Jahr durchgeführten Forschungen vor. Wir möchten Sie gern zu folgenden Vorträgen mit anschließenden Diskussionen einladen:
- Helena Adams – C.F. Rolle Mühle - das Überleben der letzten im Erzgebirge produzierenden Mühle
- Philipp Baum – Durch den „Sommer der Wahrheit“ mit der Bewegung Halle
- Philipp Bernert – Ferman - Betrachtung familiärer Überlieferungen von Verfolgung
- Pauline Kratzing – Grenzgänge - Erinnerungsarbeit und Naturschutz am Grünen Band in Thüringen
- Julien Ratinaud – “A Home Away From Home": die Unterstützung internationaler Seeleute durch christliche Missionen im Hamburger Hafen
- Edda Rohrbach – “Ich hab` nicht gestunken, ich hab nicht gestohlen und ich war auch in der Arbeit verwendbar!" – der Umgang mit dem sogenannten `Asozialenparagraphen` in der Aufarbeitung von DDR-Unrecht
- Antonia Taubert – Fragile Räume - zur Verletzlichkeit lokaler Nichtregierungsorganisationen in Bosnien und Herzegowina
Die Abschlusspräsentation findet online per WebEx statt, eine vorherige Anmeldung ist nicht nötig.
Beitrittslink, Event-Nummer: 2730 924 1014, Event-Passwort: J7CbtZEM$78
Summerschool “Post-Carbon Futures” – Outcomes published online
In September of this year, the international summer school "Post-Carbon Futures. Cities, Industries and Energies in Central Europe", co-organised by the Institute for Social and Cultural Anthropology and funded by the German Academic Exchange Service, took place in Halle. For one week, twenty national and international MA and PhD students and lecturers from Estonia, Lithuania, Scotland, England, Wales and Germany dealt with the energy transition, industrial landscapes and post-fossil futures. Outcomes of the summer school – short essays, photos and interviews with the lectures – are now documented on the summer school’s homepage www.post-carbon-futures.de .