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lauraart7

Local Knowledge: Further Essays In Interpretive Anthropology - Clifford Geertz - Google... - 0 views

shared by lauraart7 on 13 Sep 17 - No Cached
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    dense explanation by Gertz' of his own anthropological framework- perhaps of a system in each culture, social phenomena, 
lauraart7

Thick description - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • a thick description of a human behavior is one that explains not just the behavior, but its context as well, such that the behavior becomes meaningful to an outsider.
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    this phrase is a reminder of the interpreter/observer of culture
lauraart7

Symbolic anthropology - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • cultural symbols and how those symbols can be used to better understanding a particular society
  • man is an animal suspended in webs of significance he himself has spun, I take culture to be those webs, and the analysis of it to be therefore not an experimental science in search of law but an interpretive one in search of meaning".[1]
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    interesting quote and phrase by Clifford Gertz
lauraart7

particularism | anthropology | Britannica.com - 0 views

  • Boas’s own work emphasized studies of individual cultures, each based on its unique history. He held that the anthropologist’s primary assignment was to describe the particular characteristics of a given culture with a view toward reconstructing the historical events that led to its present structure. Implicit in this approach was the notion that resolving hypotheses regarding evolutionary development and the influence of one culture on another should be secondary to the careful and exhaustive study of particular societies.
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    a helpful definition of particularism and an "index" of further avenues to investigate. Franz Boas, A.L. Krober, Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead. Cultural evolution theory, Kulturekreis, geographical/environmental determinism, -- replaced by Neoevolutionsim after 1970s. 
lauraart7

particularism | Definition of particularism in English by Oxford Dictionaries - 0 views

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    Initially, my understanding of "Particularity" was a positive identity of place and it's inhabitants- this could proved a view on the limitations of, which is "Particularism" 
lauraart7

Local particularism challenged, 1795-1813 | Thomas Poell - Academia.edu - 0 views

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    could provide historical patterns and framework of local particularism and it's evolution (in Europe 1795-1823)
lauraart7

Agroforestry in Sustainable Agricultural Systems. Louise E. Buck , James P. Lassoie , E... - 0 views

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    for deeper reference beyond current information
lauraart7

Moving at the Speed of Creativity | Social networking sites (SNS), Convivial Technologi... - 0 views

  • For SNS to be used in convivial ways, I contend we need to exert healthy and frequent doses of “digital discipline.”
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    This blog entry has less content but poses an interesting question about Social network systems (SNS) as Convivial Technology --  posted in 2011, the question seems out of date and obvious, but the highlighted segment, "For SNS to be used in convivial ways, I contend we need to exert healthy and frequent doses of "digital discipline," suggests that non-convivial tech can be transformed into convivial tech with intentionality and discipline, and vice versa. 
lauraart7

JOTS v26n1 - Appropriate Technology for Socioeconomic Development in Third World Countries - 0 views

  • Worsening socioeconomic conditions in the Third World have underscored the urgency of implementing a development path that de-emphasizes growth and technological monoculture. The technological orientation of this development paradigm has been variously called intermediate, progressive, alternative, light-capital, labor-intensive, indigenous, appropriate, low-cost, community, soft, radical, liberatory, and convivial technology. However, appropriate technology, for reasons to be addressed later, has emerged as the allembracing rubric representing the viewpoints associated with all the other terms.
  • From Gandhi's perspective, any concern with goods requires mass production, but concern with people necessitates production by the masses. The Charkha (spinning wheel) was Gandhi's ideal appropriate technology device, and he saw in it a symbol of freedom, self-reliance, and a technical means that was right for India. The idea of technology discriminately enriching a minority of people at the expense of the majority or putting masses of people out of work to increase profit was in Gandhi's view counterproductive and unacceptable. However, Gandhi was not uncompromising in his rejection of large-scale, capital-intensive industrial enterprises. Modern-sector industrial development, in Gandhi's view, should supplement and reinforce the development of small-scale industries and agriculture in the hinterland.
  • The rationale was that with appropriate technology the chances of its acceptance by those for whom it was intended would be greatly improved.
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    Convivial in the context of third world, synonyms of CT, labor industry, production and job economy, class/caste power : highlighted example "appropriate technology" Gandhi to Schumacher to Intermediate Development Technology Group (ITDG) and subsequent movement
lauraart7

Moving at the Speed of Creativity | Convivial Technologies, Storychasers and Digital St... - 0 views

  • As promoting a richer and fuller living of life? Are there technologies or technology uses you love which draw you closer to other people and make you more acutely aware of the REAL important things in life? Because “storychasing” an oral history interview with someone involves things like listening, wondering, and asking, I think these activities with technology actually “humanize” us as individuals and in groups more than they “distance and distract.”
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    from general definition search of Convivial Technology with vivid wording on it's place in making life meaningful, beyond the ideas "compatible with life" Kelly, and that "technology is a monolithic concept...to embrace or reject whole, rather than take a more discriminating and thoughtful approach." (Blog Author, W. Fryer) Also mentions Kevin Kelly's book, "What Technology Wants"
lauraart7

The Matrix of Convivial Technology - Assessing technologies for degrowth - ScienceDirect - 0 views

  • Looking for a definition of convivial technologies it uses qualitative empirical research conducted with degrowth-oriented groups developing or adapting grassroots technologies
  • summed up into five dimensions: relatedness, adaptability, accessibility, bio-interaction and appropriateness. These dimensions can be correlated with the four life-cycle levels material, production, use and infrastructure to form the Matrix for Convivial Technology (MCT).
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    from general search on definition of Convivial Tech
lauraart7

Reframing the meaning of disability to families: the embrace of paradox. - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  • Using in-depth case studies, this qualitative research examined the daily occupations and subjective well-being of six Mexican-origin mothers parenting children with disabilities. Emergent findings demonstrated that these mothers do express apparently contradictory emotions of grief and joy, hope and fear that influenced their subjective well-being. The meaning of the mothers' contrary statements was illuminated in a life metaphor, the embrace of paradox
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    reframing the meaning of disability- in Mexico
lauraart7

'The Bridge'; A device designed to help addicts get clean | WRGT - 0 views

  • The device is called the Bridge. It's a small, compact device with several electrodes that send pulses to the mid-brain. The portion of the brain that controls addiction. The bridge stops the effects of withdrawal in some cases within minutes. It's symptoms every addict recognizes the symptoms of withdrawal.
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