
Podcast
Unsettling Landscapes
8
0
The Praxis podcast mini-series was created in anticipation of the upcoming 2024 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA), which is being held November 20-23 in Tampa. The episodes engage guests in a dialogue about the theme of Praxis, their work, and the greater Tampa area. The podcast was created as a partnership between the AAA and Matt Artz.
The Praxis podcast mini-series was created in anticipation of the upcoming 2024 Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association (AAA), which is being held November 20-23 in Tampa. The episodes engage guests in a dialogue about the theme of Praxis, their work, and the greater Tampa area. The podcast was created as a partnership between the AAA and Matt Artz.
Cheryl Rodriguez on Praxis, Local Challenges, and the 2024 AAA Annual Meeting in Tampa
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the AAA Annual Meeting podcast, Matt Artz talks with Cheryl Rodriguez, chair of the Local Organizing Committee (LOC) for the 2024 AAA Annual Meeting, about the conference theme "Praxis: The Application/s of Anthropology in the Present and the Future." They discuss how this theme reflects current challenges and opportunities in anthropology, [...]
25:10
Kamela Heyward-Rotimi, David Simmons & Rachel Watkins on Praxis and the 2024 Annual Meeting
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the AAA Annual Meeting podcast, Matt Artz talks with the Executive Programming Committee (EPC) co-chairs about the 2024 conference theme "Praxis: The Application/s of Anthropology in the Present and the Future." The guests discuss how this theme reflects current challenges and opportunities in anthropology, particularly in light of the conference location [...]
48:10
Naomi Adelson & Cara Krmpotich: On Transitions and Toronto's Cultural Scene
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the AAA/CASCA Annual Meeting podcast, Naomi Adelson and Cara Krmpotich speak with Matt Artz about the theme of transitions and the importance of community engagement and co-research in their respective fields. They also discuss the concept of data sovereignty and its implications for research and indigenous communities. They also discuss the ongoing process of transition and reconciliation in Canada, particularly in relation to indigenous history and culture. Finally, they provide recommendations for exploring Toronto, including visiting museums such as the Royal Ontario Museum and the Bata Shoe Museum.
About Naomi Adelson
Naomi Adelson is Professor and Associate Vice President, Research and Innovation at Toronto Metropolitan University. As a medical anthropologist she has worked for over 30 years with the Iiyiyu’ch of Whapmagoostui First Nation, in Iiyiyu Istchee (in northern Québec). Her approach to research is grounded in a critical-interpretive analytical framework. Through that framework, her research over the years has looked to challenge and unsettle normative conceptualizations of the human body. Naomi has more recently been working collaboratively with the Whapmagoostui First Nation to digitize and transfer her years of research data to the community in a format appropriate to supporting their active stewardship of the recordings, transcriptions and images. In a separate project, she is exploring the history of a nurse who worked in Whapmagoostui/Kuujjuarapik during the Cold War period of the early 1960s and, in 2021, launched an online life history of esteemed Iiyiyu educator and friend, the late Emily Masty.
About Cara Krmpotich
Cara Krmpotich is a museum anthropologist, specializing in decolonializing and Indigenizing museum practices. Her research and teaching is focused on collections management, repatriation and cultural property, kinship and material culture, and community-engaged practice. Professor Krmpotich is co-director of GRASAC (the Great Lakes Research Alliance for the Study of Aboriginal Arts and Cultures), an interdisciplinary network of scholars based in Indigenous nations, museums and universities committed to reuniting Great Lakes cultural belongings held in museums with the peoples, places, and knowledges of the territory. She is also co-leader of DigiLabs, an initiative between researchers and museum professionals in Manchester and Toronto to better understand issues of equity, empathy and ethics in digital cultural heritage practices and research. Professor Krmpotich serves as President of the Council for Museum Anthropology, is a Board member for the Ontario Museum Association, and a volunteer with the Textile Museum of Canada. She is a mother, baker, dog enthusiast and avid crossworder.
Toronto Destinations
Harbourfront (close to convention centre) & Music Garden
St. Lawrence Market (historical building and great market)
Kensington Market - a place of transitions as waves of immigrants moved into the city
Queen Street & Graffiti Alley - more funky, range of quirky, independent shops alongside the fashion chains
The Beach (East end of the city, on Lake Ontario)
Distillery District
Pan-Am trail connecting walking and cycling trails along the waterfront and the Don Valley and a range of Toronto neighbourhoods. It’s 80 km long!
Glad Day Bookshop - the world’s oldest queer bookstore!
Toronto Museums
Gardiner - Soaking Wet and On Fire, Natalka Husar (Ukrainian-Canadian identity and belonging); Magdalene Odundo: A Dialogue with Objects (largest North American exhibition to date) seeks transcultural ways of working that are neither colonial nor extractive. Free Thursdays after 4 pm.
ROM - Being and Belonging: Contemporary Women Artists from the Islamic World and Beyond, featuring work by 25 artists. And Death: Life’s Great Mystery. Free Admission for Indigenous peoples; Tuesdays are free for Canadian post-secondary students.
Bata Shoe Museum - Raymond Moriyama architect; In Bloom: Flowers and Footwear; Obsessed: How Shoes Became Objects of Desire. Permanent exhibit: All About Shoes. Free Admission on Sundays (12-5 pm)
Textile Museum of Canada - Gathering. Free for Indigenous visitors.
Fort York National Historic Site - Free admission and free guided tours. Special exhibition: Transforming Grief: Loss & Togetherness in Covid-19
Power Plant Contemporary Art Gallery - Free Admission - brand new slate of exhibitions opening Oct 13
Two special Museum Tour opportunities:
Aga Khan Museum - Thursday (fee includes bus, entry, and group tour) - extraordinary museum with collection from historically significant Muslim civilizations and contemporary communities. Special exhibit: Shezad Dawood: Night in the Garden of Love: multisensory multimedia, gardens for conversations about the environment and the self. Outside the organized tour, the museum is free on Wednesday evenings (4-8 pm)
McMichael Art Gallery - Sunday - beautiful location and recognized for its collection of Canadian art, with particular focus on the Group of Seven.
About the 2023 AAA/CASCA Annual Meeting
The 2023 AAA/CASCA Annual Meeting is being held Nov. 15-19 in Toronto, Canada. The theme for this year is Transitions. Transitions may be the most constant feature of everyday life. With endless uncertainties that are exacerbated by political turmoil, pandemic unpredictability, and climate crisis, our quotidian experiences are steeped in mutability. Transitions present us with both challenges and opportunities, not only in our everyday lives but also in our work as anthropologists. We hope that transitions may be something that we can approach with a sense of experimentation, imagination, and play, rather than a growing state of exhaustion and dread. As we navigate these transitions, we continue to think about how anthropology can rise to face our current condition, or ways it may fall short. For more information, visit annualmeeting.americananthro.org.
About the AAA
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems.
It publishes a portfolio of 22 journals, offer career planning and professional development services, support college and university departments, award numerous prizes and fellowships, sponsor a paid summer internship program, and stage research conferences in the Fall and Spring each year.
About CASCA
The Canadian Anthropology Society/Société canadienne d’anthropologie is a bilingual organization operating at a national level with the mandate to promote anthropology in Canada; support anthropological research; disseminate anthropological knowledge in the academic milieu and to the wider public.
La société canadienne d’anthropologie est une organisation bilingue opérant au niveau national et qui a pour mandat de : promouvoir l’anthropologie au Canada; soutenir la recherche anthropologique; diffuser la connaissance de cette discipline dans le milieu académique et dans le public en général.
About Matt Artz
Matt Artz is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. He writes, speaks, and consults in user experience, product management, and business strategy. He creates products, podcasts, music, and visual art. His podcasts include Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX.
24:51
Monica Heller: The Significance of Language in Social Relations
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the AAA/CASCA Annual Meeting podcast, Monica Heller talks with guest host Isabelle LeBlanc about the theme of transitions and her work in linguistic anthropology. She highlights the multicultural and multilingual nature of the city, emphasizing the importance of understanding diversity and inequality. Monica shares her experiences of conducting ethnography in Toronto and the [...]
31:01
Cassandra Hartblay: The Cultural Dimensions of Disability & Performance Ethnography
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the AAA Annual Meeting podcast, Cassandra Hartblay talks with Matt Artz about the theme of transitions, her research on the cultural dimensions of disability in post-Soviet Russia, and her use of performance ethnography as a method to explore and understand disability. They also discuss the importance of accessibility and inclusion, both within the academic field and in the city of Toronto. Finally, Cassandra shares recommendations for places to visit and highlights the Tangled Art + Disability art gallery as a vibrant hub for showcasing the artwork of disabled artists.
About Cassandra Hartblay
Cassandra Hartblay is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Health Humanities at the University of Toronto Scarborough. She is also the Director of the Centre for Global Disability Studies. With a background in sociocultural and medical anthropology, Cassandra specializes in gender, sexuality, and disability theory, with a specific regional focus on Russia and the former Soviet Union.
Cassandra’s research combines ethnographic methods with documentary arts, performative and visual formats, and traditional academic writing. She brings a unique blend of academic expertise and experience in non-profit work, digital media, and event planning to her work in academia, contributing to institution building within the field.
At the core of Cassandra’s research is an exploration of citizenship and disability, particularly within the context of post-Soviet Russia. Her work bridges the fields of Medical Anthropology, Disability Studies, and Queer Theory, offering a synthesis of theoretical perspectives to understand and address the complex intersectionalities of disability and citizenship. Cassandra’s ethnographic approach enables her to delve deep into the lived experiences and perspectives of individuals, contributing to a nuanced understanding of disability in its social and cultural contexts.
About the 2023 AAA Annual Meeting
The 2023 AAA Annual Meeting is being held Nov. 15-19 in Toronto, Canada. The theme for this year is Transitions. Transitions may be the most constant feature of everyday life. With endless uncertainties that are exacerbated by political turmoil, pandemic unpredictability, and climate crisis, our quotidian experiences are steeped in mutability. Transitions present us with both challenges and opportunities, not only in our everyday lives but also in our work as anthropologists. We hope that transitions may be something that we can approach with a sense of experimentation, imagination, and play, rather than a growing state of exhaustion and dread. As we navigate these transitions, we continue to think about how anthropology can rise to face our current condition, or ways it may fall short. For more information, visit annualmeeting.americananthro.org.
About the AAA
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems.
It publishes a portfolio of 22 journals, offer career planning and professional development services, support college and university departments, award numerous prizes and fellowships, sponsor a paid summer internship program, and stage research conferences in the Fall and Spring each year.
About Matt Artz
Matt Artz is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. He writes, speaks, and consults in user experience, product management, and business strategy. He creates products, podcasts, music, and visual art. His podcasts include Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX.
23:02
Mary Gray: On the Internet and Identity-making
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the Unsettling Landscapes podcast, Mary Gray talks with Matt Artz about her career studying the internet and identity-making.
About Mary Gray
Mary L. Gray is Senior Principal Researcher at Microsoft Research and Faculty Associate at Harvard University’s Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society. She maintains a faculty position in the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering with affiliations in Anthropology and Gender Studies at Indiana University. Mary, an anthropologist and media scholar by training, focuses on how people’s everyday uses of technologies transform labor, identity, and human rights. Mary earned her PhD in Communication from the University of California at San Diego in 2004, under the direction of Susan Leigh Star. In 2020, Mary was named a MacArthur Fellow for her contributions to anthropology and the study of technology, digital economies, and society.
About the 2022 AAA Annual Meeting
The 2022 AAA Annual Meeting is being held Nov. 9-13, Seattle, WA. The theme for this year is Unsettling Landscapes. The theme asks two questions: In what ways are we, and those we work with, unsettled? How are we also unsettling landscapes, and to what end? For more information, visit annualmeeting.americananthro.org.
About the AAA
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems.
It publishes a portfolio of 22 journals, offer career planning and professional development services, support college and university departments, award numerous prizes and fellowships, sponsor a paid summer internship program, and stage research conferences in the Fall and Spring each year.
About Matt Artz
Matt Artz is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. He writes, speaks, and consults in user experience, product management, and business strategy. He creates products, podcasts, music, and visual art. His podcasts include Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX.
32:22
Peter Knutson: On Teaching and Existential Anthropology
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the Unsettling Landscapes podcast, Peter Knutson talks with Matt Artz about his career as a commercial fisherman, building alliances, and teaching anthropology as a form of existential reflection.
About Peter Knutson
Peter Knutson is an anthropologist and commercial fisherman from Everett, WA. He was educated in public schools, attended Stanford as an undergraduate and was indefinitely suspended by Stanford in 1972 for disrupting recruiting by a weapons manufacturer. He then studied in New York at New School for Social Research, attending classes taught by Murray Bookchin, Hannah Arendt, and Stanley Aronowitz, among others. In 1987 he received his doctorate in sociocultural anthropology from the University of Washington. His dissertation was an autoethnography of a mutiny on a commercial fishing vessel in the North Pacific, informed by Frankfurt School Critical Theory. He has taught in Seattle area community colleges since 1981 and has been tenured at Seattle Central College since 1998. He publishes articles dealing with politics and community in Seattle newspapers and in critical journals such as Counterpunch.
About the 2022 AAA Annual Meeting
The 2022 AAA Annual Meeting is being held Nov. 9-13, Seattle, WA. The theme for this year is Unsettling Landscapes. The theme asks two questions: In what ways are we, and those we work with, unsettled? How are we also unsettling landscapes, and to what end? For more information, visit annualmeeting.americananthro.org.
About the AAA
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems.
It publishes a portfolio of 22 journals, offer career planning and professional development services, support college and university departments, award numerous prizes and fellowships, sponsor a paid summer internship program, and stage research conferences in the Fall and Spring each year.
About Matt Artz
Matt Artz is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. He writes, speaks, and consults in user experience, product management, and business strategy. He creates products, podcasts, music, and visual art. His podcasts include Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX.
26:18
Charles Menzies: Who are the Unsettled?
Episode in
Unsettling Landscapes
In this episode of the Unsettling Landscapes podcast, Charles Menzies talks with Matt Artz about his views on who he believes is truly the unsettled and his work with film and the environment. He also serves up a delicious tip for some food to get while in Seattle.
About Charles Menzies
Charles R. Menzies is a Canadian anthropologist and full professor. He is a member of the Gitxaala Nation of northwestern British Columbia and an enrolled member of the Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska. His primary research interests are the production of anthropological films, natural resource management (primarily fisheries related), political economy, contemporary First Nations’ issues, maritime anthropology, and the archaeology of north coast BC.
About the 2022 AAA Annual Meeting
The 2022 AAA Annual Meeting is being held Nov. 9-13, Seattle, WA. The theme for this year is Unsettling Landscapes. The theme asks two questions: In what ways are we, and those we work with, unsettled? How are we also unsettling landscapes, and to what end? For more information, visit annualmeeting.americananthro.org.
About the AAA
Founded in 1902, the American Anthropological Association is the world’s largest scholarly and professional organization of anthropologists. The Association is dedicated to advancing human understanding and applying this understanding to the world’s most pressing problems.
It publishes a portfolio of 22 journals, offer career planning and professional development services, support college and university departments, award numerous prizes and fellowships, sponsor a paid summer internship program, and stage research conferences in the Fall and Spring each year.
About Matt Artz
Matt Artz is a business and design anthropologist, consultant, author, speaker, and creator. He writes, speaks, and consults in user experience, product management, and business strategy. He creates products, podcasts, music, and visual art. His podcasts include Anthropology in Business and Anthro to UX.
34:00
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