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Jovan Maud

Game Design as Cultural Practice » Blog Archive » The design of Second Life a... - 1 views

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    Here's an promising-looking blog for those of you interested in gaming.
Jovan Maud

Parenting for a Digital Future - 0 views

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    Blog focusing on parenting and digital media. Central questions: How do parents seek to bring up their children in the digital age? What is parents' vision of their children's future and that of the wider society? What risks and opportunities will characterise the digital future?
Jovan Maud

Why are we sleeping with our phones? | Anthropology in Practice, Scientific American Bl... - 1 views

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    More on the curious intimacy of mobile phones in our lives and the role they play in mediating the distinction between "public" and "private".
Jovan Maud

The Memory Bank » Blog Archive » In Rousseau's footsteps: David Graeber and t... - 0 views

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    If you're interested in issues of social equality, debt, finance, etc -- AND the internet, you might like to read this long review of David Graeber's book "Debt: The Last 5,000 years". If you follow Hart here, the internet offers something much greater than just a means of communication -- it could offer a necessary element in creating new, more "human" forms of social interaction.
Jovan Maud

Opening Anthropology: An interview with Keith Hart (Part 3 of 3) | Savage Minds - 0 views

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    An interesting interview for considering the relationship between anthropology and the digital revolution. There is some genuinely creative thought here on what anthropology needs to do to engage with the current and to remain (or become again) relevant.
Jovan Maud

The Memory Bank » Blog Archive » Opening Anthropology: An interview with Keit... - 0 views

  • I have discussed what happened next, at least for Britain, in “How my generation let down our students [5]”. The watershed of the 1970s culminated in the neoliberal counter-revolution that saw Reagan and Thatcher come to power. Competitive pseudo-markets based academic assessment on so-called “objective” indicators, especially research publications. Bureaucracies became more interventionist along with the wholesale corporatization of university culture. What was left of academic community was destroyed by the growing gap between a few established professors who took leave often and a reserve army of precarious young teachers. The publishing oligopoly exhausted library budgets with their over-priced journals, while the academics competed for the status of getting published in them. Everyone agrees that the contents are worthless and are not read. Faced with the challenge of the internet, most academics did their utmost to maintain the system of feudal private property that has now overwhelmed the universities.
Jovan Maud

Gamers Have the Skills to Make Great Politicians… « Cyber Anthropology : Anth... - 0 views

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    WoW player as US Congresswoman? Wow! ;-)
Jovan Maud

Digital Anthropology: Projects and Platforms | Neuroanthropology - 0 views

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    Some examples of current work being done in the area of digital anthropology
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