Logo

    social anthropology

    Explore "social anthropology" with insightful episodes like "043 - Government & Cultural Centralization", "The Art of Celebrity Journalism ft. Namrata Zakaria, Journalist & Columnist", "Layers of Protection: Everyday Life with Empowered Objects", "Sir Antony Gormley, alumnus speaks about why he values studying social anthropology" and "Conceptions of Sin and the Nature of Social Life: Anthropology and the Theology of Atonement" from podcasts like ""Illegitimate Scholar", "This Round Is On Me with Gauri Devidayal", "Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar", "Events hosted by the Office of Scholarly Communication" and "Faraday Institute Lectures"" and more!

    Episodes (29)

    043 - Government & Cultural Centralization

    043 - Government & Cultural Centralization

    Centralization of political authority and how it happens over time to today. Early Humans. Roman/Chinese Empire. Early Modern. Modern. Post-Modern.

    Discord:
    https://discord.gg/KhJgpMj6Jj

    Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/IllegitimateScholar

    Audio Podcast: 
    https://pod.link/1650280020 

    Twitter.com: 
    https://twitter.com/ill_scholar

    Youtube: 
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRH77S0fVLmAZU4xLnAxuvw

    1. Centralization
      1. Definition
        1. the action or process of bringing activities together in one place.
        2. the concentration of control of an activity or organization under a single authority.
    2. Hunter-gatherers, state of nature
    3. Any higher centralization requires some level of political organization
    4. Early Empires
      1. Rome similar but specific example China
        1. Standardized writing system: 
        2. Standardized systems of weights and measures: 
        3. Standardized currency: 
        4. Network of roads and canals: 
        5. Great Wall of China:
    5. After Roman Empire collapses the next thing I want to concentrate on is the modern era, beginning with the era of “absolutism”
      1. Feudalism in Europe was decentralized
    6. Phillip II of Spain
      1. He established the Royal Printing Office in Madrid in 1566
    7. Established the Tercios
      1. Professional Army under Spain specifically
      2. Rather than feudal levies
      3. Standardized, highly effective
    8. He built new roads and canals to connect different parts of Spain and to facilitate the movement of troops and supplies.
      1. Physical location very important
      2. China, Rome, USA, always important, speed matters
    9. He expanded the Spanish bureaucracy and created new government departments
      1. Always
      2. Replaces feudalism
      3. Put loyal people in those positions
        1. #patronage
    10. He established a postal service that linked Madrid to all major Spanish cities
      1. With new roads, postal service allows control of larger area, utilize those roads, make information reliable and control
    11. All only possible with marriage of Ferdinand and Isabella of Castile in 1469
      1. Leads into Spain
    12. Modern era
      1. All the centralization in the modern era mirrors the past
      2. Railroads allowed for even faster transportation
      3. Telegraph for faster information transfer
      4. Ship technology faster transport
      5. Regional languages disappear as people are incentivized to speak the most economically viable language
    13. Post-Modern and the future
      1. That brings us to today
      2. Internet is an insane force
    14. Lifestyle centralization
      1. People in Namibia, Indonesia, Myanmar can see life in the upper classes of North America, Europe, East Asia, Middle Easst
    15. Globalism and the New World Order


    Discord:
    https://discord.gg/KhJgpMj6Jj

    Patreon:
    https://www.patreon.com/IllegitimateScholar

    Audio Podcast:
    https://pod.link/1650280020

    Twitter.com:
    https://twitter.com/ill_scholar

    Youtube:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRH77S0fVLmAZU4xLnAxuvw

    The Art of Celebrity Journalism ft. Namrata Zakaria, Journalist & Columnist

    The Art of Celebrity Journalism ft. Namrata Zakaria, Journalist & Columnist
    If you are a Mumbaikar, you're well aware of the very popular and loved 'Mumbai Mirror'. The first page would carry the city's big news and the next one would carry, what everyone would say, gossip, but was actually just news about popular people. You liked it, you hated it, but you'd always read it.
    And one of the major contributing members, Namrata Zakaria joins Gauri Devidayal on this round.
    Namrata is a journalist and columnist for various publications where she mainly writes on fashion & culture. She’s vocal about preserving India’s legacy of weaving craftsmanship and has even initiated a fundraising program to this end. Tune in to hear all about her journey.
    Find Namrata on Instagram:
    (https://www.instagram.com/namratazakaria/)
    On Twitter:
    (https://twitter.com/namratazakaria)
    You can follow Gauri on Instagram: @gauridevidayal
    https://instagram.com/gauridevidayal
    Twitter: @gauridetails
    www.twitter.com/@gauridetails/
    You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: IVM Podcasts - Apps on Google Play or iOS: ‎IVM Podcasts, or any other podcast app.
    You can check out our website at IVM Podcasts - Indian Podcasts for you to listen to

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Layers of Protection: Everyday Life with Empowered Objects

    Layers of Protection: Everyday Life with Empowered Objects
    In her talk, Inger Vasstveit discusses “empowered objects” - small Buddhist objects that people wear on their person - in relation to the broader socio-political and cosmological environment in India In this talk, I will focus on vital aspects connected to the ways Tibetans use and understand empowered objects. The term "empowered objects" refers to a wide range of small objects – infused with Buddhist powers – that people wore on their person. My interlocutors used the terms srung ba (protection) or simply byin rlabs (blessing) when referring to these objects in general. In English these objects are often termed amulets or charms. In my talk I term these objects "empowered objects" and I will present some of the objects that people commonly wore. I will also conceptualize the practice of producing and using empowered objects as a “technology” applied to cope with local, mundane concerns – such as travels, illnesses, social interactions and a possible major earthquake – and which simultaneously influenced people’s movements, perceptions and emotions. It is my argument that these powerful objects can be seen as empowering practice to maintain health and to navigate in a dynamic and capricious socio-political, physical and cosmological environment. At the same time, the practice can be understood as constitutive for the continuous making of a Buddhist lifeworld.

    'Law, Victimhood and the Body' by Rita Kesselring

    'Law, Victimhood and the Body' by Rita Kesselring
    The Lauterpacht Centre for International Law (LCIL), University of Cambridge hosts a regular Friday lunchtime lecture series on key areas of International Law. Previous subjects have included UN peacekeeping operations, the advisory jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, the crime of aggression, whaling, children and military tribunals, and theories and practices for proving individual responsibility criminal responsibility for genocide and crimes against humanity. This lecture, entitled 'Law, Victimhood and the Body', was delivered at the Lauterpacht Centre on Friday 21st October 2016 by Dr Rita Kesselring, Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Basel.

    Creativity Lecture 3: Creativity - Abduction or Improvisation?

    Creativity Lecture 3: Creativity - Abduction or Improvisation?
    Tim Ingold (University of Aberdeen) discusses his current research, on the comparative anthropology of the line, exploring issues on the interface between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture. Tim Ingold is Professor of Social Anthropology and Head of the School of Social Science at the University of Aberdeen. He has carried out ethnographic fieldwork in Lapland, and has written on the role of animals in human society, on language and tool use, and on environmental perception and skilled practice. His key publications include: Evolution and Social Life (Cambridge University Press), Tools, Language and Cognition in Human Evolution (co-edited, with Kathleen Gibson, Cambridge University Press), The Perception of the Environment (Routledge) and Lines: A Brief History (Routledge).

    Creativity Lecture 3: Creativity - Abduction or Improvisation?

    Creativity Lecture 3: Creativity - Abduction or Improvisation?
    Tim Ingold (University of Aberdeen) discusses his current research, on the comparative anthropology of the line, exploring issues on the interface between anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture. Tim Ingold is Professor of Social Anthropology and Head of the School of Social Science at the University of Aberdeen. He has carried out ethnographic fieldwork in Lapland, and has written on the role of animals in human society, on language and tool use, and on environmental perception and skilled practice. His key publications include: Evolution and Social Life (Cambridge University Press), Tools, Language and Cognition in Human Evolution (co-edited, with Kathleen Gibson, Cambridge University Press), The Perception of the Environment (Routledge) and Lines: A Brief History (Routledge).
    Logo

    © 2024 Podcastworld. All rights reserved

    Stay up to date

    For any inquiries, please email us at hello@podcastworld.io