“保持对美好未来的希望”:对Crystal Felima博士的采访

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Annals of Anthropological Practice Pub Date : 2023-08-24 DOI:10.1111/napa.12205
Crystal Felima, Abigail DeeWaard, Clara Barbier, Erica Cano-Garcia, Gonzalo Jeronimo, Nari Coleman, Nataliya Hryshko, Mark Schuller
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然人类学家为边缘化群体发声,正式打击反犹太主义、种族主义和仇外心理,但他们也帮助社区边缘化和压迫,为殖民主义辩护,并将他们研究的社区置于危险之中。近几十年来,人类学家重新思考了研究的进行方式、呈现方式和合理性,以减少对社区的伤害。尽管有这些变化,人类学培训一直很慢,没有包括有色人种女性和其他边缘化人群的活动家工作,这使得正在接受培训的人类学家在如何将人类学视角应用于社会正义方面的具体指导有限。为了解决这一差距,本文以黑人女权主义分析为中心,对人类学学生和一位人类学教授进行了采访,深入了解人类学思想如何应用于激进主义和倡导。以黑人女权主义为中心不仅对纠正学科中的历史边缘化很重要。黑人女权主义分析将边缘化人群的生活置于一个交叉的视角中,为重新思考政治生态学等理论模型提供了一项任务,政治生态学是人类学家用来应对灾难和气候变化的主导框架。同样重要的是,以黑人女性的身体和具体经历为中心,揭示了在实地调查中自我护理的迫切必要性。Felima教授体现了这两个挑战,并为学生提供了坦诚的建议,激发了双向对话。
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“Maintaining hope for a better future”: An interview with Dr. Crystal Felima

While anthropologists have played roles speaking out for marginalized groups, formalized to combat Antisemitism, racism, and xenophobia, they have also aided in the marginalization and oppression of communities, justified colonialism, and put the communities they have studied at risk. In recent decades, anthropologists have rethought the way research is conducted, presented, and justified to reduce harm to communities. Despite these shifts, anthropological training has been slow to include activist work by women of color and other marginalized people, leaving anthropologists-in-training with limited concrete guidance on how to apply their anthropological lens to social justice. Addressing this gap, this article centering a Black feminist analysis offers an interview conducted between anthropology students and a professor of anthropology, giving insights into how anthropological thought can be applied to activism and advocacy. Centering Black feminism is not only important to redress historical marginalization within the discipline. By centering the lives of marginalized people within an intersectional lens, Black feminist analysis provides a mandate to rethink theoretical models, such as political ecology, the dominant frame anthropologists have used to address disasters and climate change. Also importantly, centering Black women's bodies and embodied experience uncovers the urgent necessity for self-care during fieldwork. Prof. Felima embodies both these challenges, and offers candid advice to students, inspiring a two-way dialogue.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
21
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