21 research outputs found
The Aesthetic Politics of Unfinished Media: New Media Activism in Brazil
This article analyzes the role of key visual technologies in contemporary media activism in Brazil. Drawing on a range of media formats and sources, it examines how the aesthetic politics of activists in protests that took place in 2013 opened the way for wider sociopolitical change. The forms and practices of the media activists, it is argued, aimed explicitly at producing transformative politics. New media technologies were remediated as a kind of equipment that could generate new relationships and subjectivities, and thereby access to intentionally undetermined futures
Lab Notes: Write-up of an experiment in collaborative anthropology
What are the actual practices of intellectual co-laboring? In the spring of 2006, we began an experiment in collaborative anthropology. There was a dual impetus to our efforts: a desire to deal head-on with inadequacies in our academic environment; and a strong feeling that the classic norms of qualitative inquiry needed to become contemporary. Collaboration struck us as potentially key to both. We drew a parallel to laboratory experiments. In the textbook version, one begins with a question, formulates a hypothesis, then tests it by adapting or inventing techniques and practicing them. With a certain irony, we nicknamed our experiment the “labinar,” lab plus seminar. From the beginning, we understood the “labinar” as an experiment in venue construction and form. We understood it as an intervention into pedagogic practice, as well as anthropological inquiry. Our reasoning was that the world is different than it was when the standards of qualitative human or social science became codified in the heyday of traditional anthropological fieldwork
A estĂ©tica polĂtica do ativismo atravĂ©s de novas mĂdias
Neste capĂtulo, analisa-se a documentação visual dos protestos de 2013, contrastando a cobertura da grande mĂdia em SĂŁo Paulo e Rio de Janeiro com a de ativistas usando as tecnologias de nova mĂdia. Os temas centrais sĂŁo a forma como o exercĂcio do poder polĂtico Ă© mediado atravĂ©s de novas tecnologias de mĂdia e a racionalidade polĂtica que anima os ativistas. Dito de outro modo, pergunta-se: por que os atores criaram imagens da forma que o fizeram e que objetivos polĂticos estavam em jogo? No que se segue, consideram-se principalmente as utilizações de filmagens feitas Ă mĂŁo com telefone celular, a difusĂŁo de tais imagens pelas redes sociais (mĂdia social) e a interação entre os ativistas e os governos municipais. Sugere-se que as novas tecnologias de mĂdia, atravĂ©s da qual a linguagem visual dos ativistas foi criada, eram postas a serviço de um tipo de polĂtica radical, no sentido de almejar algo diferente na raiz. Em vez de um modo de ação polĂtica com objetivos governamentais definitivos, os ativistas re-mediaram novas tecnologias de mĂdia como um tipo de equipamento que poderia gerar novas relações e subjetividades e, assim, acesso a um futuro intencionalmente indeterminado
Policing Uncertainty: On Suspicious Activity Reporting
A number of the men who would become the 9/11 hijackers were stopped for minor traffic violations. They were pulled over by police officers for speeding or caught by random inspection without a driver’s license. For United States government commissions and the press, these brushes with the law were missed opportunities. For some police officers though, they were of personal and professional significance. These officers replayed the incidents of contact with the 19 men, which lay bare the uncertainty of every encounter, whether a traffic stop, or with someone taking photos of a landmark. Representatives from law enforcement began to design policies to include local police in national intelligence, with the idea of capitalizing on what patrol officers already do in dealing with the general public. Several initiatives were launched, among these, the Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative. Routine reporting of suspicious activity was developed into steps for gathering, assessing and sharing terrorism-related information with a larger law enforcement and intelligence network. Through empirical analysis of counterterrorism efforts and recent scholarship on it, this chapter discusses prevention, preemption, and anticipation as three technologies of security, focusing on how each deals with uncertainty. The Suspicious Activity Reporting Initiative, this analysis suggests, is an anticipatory technology which constitutes police officers and intelligence analysts as subjects who work in a mode of uncertainty.
What If? Re-imagined Scenarios and the Re-virtualisation of History
This article explores the process of “re-imagined scenarios,” through which the moments of contact with the 9/11 hijackers were developed into scenarios that came to play a central role in U.S. counterterrorism training and policy. Drawing on fieldwork and interviews with trainers, government officials, and police officers, it is argued that these scenarios do not recreate previous encounters, or conjure up possible futures, but instead rely on “the elasticity of the almost” to reactivate the past. The re-imagined scenarios call forth "a certain array of recognizable elastic points," through which options for alternative movements are invente
Plantas de uso medicinal ou ritual numa feira livre no Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
Este trabalho procura documentar as espĂ©cies e os usos de plantas vendidas por ervatários numa feira semanal do bairro da Tijuca na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. Foi realizado entre os meses de agosto/98 e agosto/99, e participaram da pesquisa quatro vendedores, com mĂ©dia de 15 anos de experiĂŞncia no mercado, fornecendo as plantas e informações sobre seus nomes vulgares, usos e o preparo dos remĂ©dios. A feira foi visitada regularmente e os espĂ©cimes encontrados foram coletados, fotografados, herborizados e identificados atravĂ©s da consulta de livros, chaves e especialistas, e comparação com exemplares de herbário. A coleta resultou em 151 espĂ©cies distribuĂdas em 59 famĂlias, a melhor representada sendo Asteraceae (21), Lamiaceae (13), Solanaceae (9), Leguminosae (6), e as restantes representadas por atĂ© 5 espĂ©cies. As plantas foram classificadas em 4 categorias segundo a procedĂŞncia: comprada de terceiros (16%), cultivada nos jardins particulares dos vendedores (23%), ruderal (21%), e coletada da Mata Atlântica (40%). Foram documentadas 60 utilidades medicinais e rituais, e 15 formas de preparar as ervas, o nĂşmero de indicações sendo 30% para uso externo e 70% para uso interno, e a forma mais comum, o chá. AlĂ©m dos dados obtidos na feira, uma descrição botânica e um levantamento bibliográfico dos usos na medicina popular e em rituais afro-brasileiros sĂŁo apresentados para cada espĂ©cie. Analisa-se o papel das plantas na saĂşde e na vida religiosa das pessoas do bairro, o conhecimento dos ervatários e a preocupante coleta das plantas da Mata Atlântica
Global Health and the Demands of the Day
We have two goals in this paper: first, to provide a diagnosis of global health and underline some of its blockages; second, to offer an alternative interpretation of what the demands for those in global health may be. The assumption that health is a "good" that requires no further explanation, and that per se it can serve as an actual modus operandi, lays the foundations of the problem. Related blockages ensue and are described using HIV prevention with a focus on vaginal microbicides as a case study. Taking health as a self-evident, and self-explanatory "good" limits other possible goods; and prevents further inquiry into the actual practices of creating good practices and good measures. We propose that to create conditions under which global health could be reconstructed, "problematization" be taken up as a practice, around a series of questions asked in conjunction with those ever-urgent ones of how to ameliorate the condition of living beings
Cops, Cameras and the Policing of Ethics
In this article, we explore some of the roles of cameras in policing in the United States. We outline the trajectory of key new media technologies, arguing that cameras and social media together generate the ambient surveillance through which graphic violence is now routinely captured and circulated. Drawing on Michel Foucault, we suggest that there are important intersections between this video footage and police subjectivity, and propose to look at two: recruit training at the Washington state Basic Law Enforcement Academy and the Seattle Police Department’s body-worn camera project. We analyze these cases in relation to the major arguments for and against initiatives to increase police use of cameras, outlining what we see as techno-optimistic and techno-pessimistic positions. Drawing on the pragmatism of John Dewey, we argue for a third position that calls for field-based inquiry into the specific co-production of socio-techno subjectivities