News

Cultural Anthropology major Ashlyn Nuckols named 2017 Beinecke Scholar

Duke University junior Ashlyn Nuckols is among 20 students nationwide selected as 2017 Beinecke Scholars. The Beinecke Scholarship supports students of exceptional promise as they attend the graduate school of their choice. Beinecke recipients receive $4,000 in their senior year of undergraduate studies and $30,000 during graduate school. A student must apply as a junior, demonstrate financial need and plan to study arts, humanities or social sciences. https://today.duke.edu/2017/04/duke-junior-ashlyn-nuckols-named-2017-bei… read more about Cultural Anthropology major Ashlyn Nuckols named 2017 Beinecke Scholar »

Cultural Anthropology major Gabi Weiss awarded a Winfred Quinton Holton Prize

Gabi Weiss, cultural anthropology major and senior thesis writers, has been awarded a Winfred Quinton Holton Prize for Educational Research by Duke's Program in Education. Gabi's project considers the impacts of elite education on students, finding that the pressure to always succeed inculcates an intense risk aversion in students, among other negative consequences. For more on the award, see:  https://educationprogram.duke.edu/undergraduate/scholarships read more about Cultural Anthropology major Gabi Weiss awarded a Winfred Quinton Holton Prize »

Energy Initiative Awards Seven New Seed Grants

Research projects that explore new possibilities for energy storage, reliability, and sustainable development will receive funding in 2017 from the Duke University Energy Initiative’s Energy Research Seed Fund. Seven projects involving 14 faculty members were selected to receive a total of $240,000 from the fund. Cultural Anthropology's Christine Folch received one of these awards. Itaipú Binational Dam is the world’s largest dam in terms of energy production, supplying 18% of Brazil’s electricity and 85% of Paraguay’s.… read more about Energy Initiative Awards Seven New Seed Grants »

Bookbag: AAAS/CULANTH 333S The Wire

Television isn’t a standard jumping-off point for an academic course. But The Wire, the acclaimed HBO series that ran from 2002 through 2008 and that Entertainment Weekly ranked as the best-ever TV show, isn’t standard television. Its layered, engrossing depiction of Baltimore—informed by creator and writer David Simon’s work as a police reporter for The Baltimore Sun—appealed to Anne-Maria Makhulu, an associate professor of cultural anthropology and African & African American studies. After… read more about Bookbag: AAAS/CULANTH 333S The Wire »

Security comes from strong communities, not border walls

“Do you lock your house at night?” That was how Luke, a 19-year-old community college student I’d hired to work with me on a home improvement project, responded when he heard that I wrote a book about the U.S.-Mexico border. His point was that a border without a wall is akin to an unlocked home. Luke, a white Christian from a rural area and likely the most polite young man I’ve ever met, had me pegged me as a liberal weak on security. I know the argument well. Luke’s question may just have summed up the entire debate.… read more about Security comes from strong communities, not border walls »

Two Trinity Faculty Members Receive NEH Grant

By Duke Today Staff The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) has awarded two grant fellowships to Duke University faculty members for their respective work in humanities-based advanced research programs —one focusing on post-apartheid mobility, while the other is digital catalog connected to an upcoming Duke exhibit. Anne-Maria Makhulu, associate professor in the Department of Cultural Anthropology and African and African American Studies, and Kristin Huffman Lanzoni, instructor in the Department of Art, Art… read more about Two Trinity Faculty Members Receive NEH Grant »

A Togo Model for Student-Led Development Projects: Duke Engage students tackle development in West Africa in new Duke Press book

After decades of seeing close-up the desultory record of Western technology-based development projects in West Africa, cultural anthropologist Charles Piot tells his students to take a different approach: Start by exploring the culture and be prepared to fail at first. Now after several years of creative Duke Engage projects in a rural area of Togo, his students are writing about their experiences, successes and setbacks in a new Duke University Press book, “Doing Development in West Africa.” The lessons, Piot said, may… read more about A Togo Model for Student-Led Development Projects: Duke Engage students tackle development in West Africa in new Duke Press book »

Harris Solomon is the recipient of the Robert Cox teaching award, the highest award Duke offers for teaching

This Trinity College Distinguished Teaching Award is one of four that recognizes truly outstanding teaching in the College. Recipients are selected on the basis of their ability to encourage intellectual excitement and curiosity in students, knowledge of a field and ability to communicate it, organizational skills, mentorship of students, and commitment to excellent teaching over time. The award is in the amount of $5,000.” Congratulations Harris!!! read more about Harris Solomon is the recipient of the Robert Cox teaching award, the highest award Duke offers for teaching »

Cultural Anthropology major Carlton Lawrence T'15 has been named a Fulbright Scholar

For the 12th straight year, Duke University is one of the top producers of U.S. Fulbright Scholars, with 12 students awarded the latest scholarships, the U.S. Department of State announced Monday. The Fulbright Program is the U.S. government’s flagship international educational exchange program. Read more about the Fulbright Scholars in the following Duke Today article.   read more about Cultural Anthropology major Carlton Lawrence T'15 has been named a Fulbright Scholar »

Anne-Maria Makhulu Discusses New Book on "Left of Black"

"Left of Black" host Mark Anthony Neal is joined by Anne-Maria Makhulu to discuss her latest book, “Making Freedom: Apartheid, Squatter Politics, and the Struggle for Home”.  Makhulu is an Associate Professor of Cultural Anthropology and African and African American Studies at Duke University.  Watch the interview: Squatter Politics in Post-Apartheid Africa.   read more about Anne-Maria Makhulu Discusses New Book on "Left of Black"  »

"An Open Letter of Love" to Our Students

Inspired by the events on Duke’s campus, and Rae Paris’ “An Open Letter of Love to Black Students,” the Department of Cultural Anthropoloy collectively authored an open letter to mark its solidarity with calls for fuller accountability on matters of social justice at Duke.  "We're writing to tell you we see you and hear you."  Read the full letter on The Chronicle.   read more about "An Open Letter of Love" to Our Students »

Interview with Rebecca Stein: The Intifada, Viral Death, and the Facebook Fallacy

There are varying explanations for the uptick in violence in Israel-Palestine over the past few days, but one explanation that appears to have caught on with the Israeli government and much Western media, according to Duke University cultural anthropologist Rebecca Stein, is incitement through social media. As she notes, the word occupation is nowhere to be found in this new narrative.  Read more read more about Interview with Rebecca Stein: The Intifada, Viral Death, and the Facebook Fallacy »

Carl Lawrence, a Cultural Anthropology major, was awarded a Fulbright Student Research Grant

Carl is one of only two Duke undergraduates to be awarded a Fulbright undergraduate student research grant his year.  His project "Engaging Alternatives in South African Medical Education: A Study of the Hidden Curriculum" will examine the informal messages conveyed at South African medical schools surrounding traditional, complementary, and alternative medicines. Stigmatization of these alternatives has been shown to have negative consequences on patient care, and it is thus essential we explore both… read more about Carl Lawrence, a Cultural Anthropology major, was awarded a Fulbright Student Research Grant »

My Tibetan Childhood

Professor Ralph Litzinger was instrumental in bringing My Tibetan Childhood (Duke Press, 2015) to print.  He writes the Preface to the book.  In My Tibetan Chldhood, Naktsang Nulo recalls his life in Tibet's Amdo region during the 1950s. From the perspective of himself at age ten, he describes his upbringing as a nomad on Tibet's eastern plateau. He depicts pilgrimages to monasteries, including a 1500-mile horseback expedition his family made to and from Lhasa. A year or so later, they attempted that same… read more about My Tibetan Childhood »

Eric Oberstein is a star behind the scenes

Instruments of destiny can take many forms. For Eric Oberstein, it was an audience-response card filled out at a concert. In the fall of 2007, Oberstein was in New York as a Columbia University graduate student after earning his undergraduate degree at Duke. He went to a show by the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, an 18-piece band playing the sort of Latin jazz Oberstein had grown up hearing and playing himself.  Read more      read more about Eric Oberstein is a star behind the scenes »

Writing Culture and the Life of Anthropology

Orin Starn is the editor of a new book from Duke University Press, Writing Culture and the Life of Anthropology, which features essays by Duke professors Anne Allison and Charles Piot.  The book grew out of a Duke Cultural Anthropology-sponsored conference several years ago; its others contributors are James Clifford, George Marcus, Kim Fortun, Michael Taussig, Danilyn Rutherford, Kathleen Stewart, Hugh Raffles, John Jackson Jr., Kamala Visweswaran, Michael Fischer, Richard Handler, and Hugh Raffles: … read more about Writing Culture and the Life of Anthropology »

Law Enforcement and Mental Health Collaboration Shows Promise in Liberia

Global Health and Cultural Anthropology faculty member Brandon Kohrt has published an article in the American Journal of Public Health, about a successful collaboration between law enforcement and mental health workers in Liberia. A news story on Duke Global Health Institute's web site discusses the research behind the article. read more about Law Enforcement and Mental Health Collaboration Shows Promise in Liberia »

Cultural Anthropology major Lauren Blazing named ACC Field Hockey Scholar Athlete of the Year

Duke redshirt junior goalkeeper Lauren Blazing has been named the 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Field Hockey Scholar-Athlete of the Year and leads the sport’s All-ACC Academic Team, as announced Wednesday by Commissioner John Swofford. Blazing, a cultural anthropology and political science major from Durham, North Carolina, has been named to the Dean’s List every semester during her career at Duke.  Read more read more about Cultural Anthropology major Lauren Blazing named ACC Field Hockey Scholar Athlete of the Year »

Allison Book Honored by American Ethnological Society

Cultural Anthropology Professor Anne Allison's book "Precarious Japan" has received honorable mention honors in the annual American Ethnological Society's (AES) Senior Book Prize. Published by Duke University Press, the book explores Japanese experiences of job insecurity and isolation amid a nagging recession, nuclear contamination and a population that is both aging and shrinking.  Read more about the recognition on Duke Today. read more about Allison Book Honored by American Ethnological Society »

Cultural Anthropology students participate in Hunger Strike

A small group of Duke students enrolled in PhD programs, including Cultural Anthropology graduate students, are on a hunger strike, hoping to raise awareness about Kobani—an area at the border of Turkey and Syria—that is currently being targeted by ISIS rebels. The students deplore the lack of awareness about this issue in the U.S and wish to inform the student population about the matter. On a flyer they are handing to passers-by, the students declare that they “support Kobani’s spirit of self-defense and call on the… read more about Cultural Anthropology students participate in Hunger Strike »

Anne Allison Precarious Japan

“[All] I want to eat is a rice ball.” This was the last entry in the diary of a 52-year-old man who starved to death in an apartment he had occupied for 20 years. His is just one of many voices of the precarity of everyday life and death that populate Anne Allison’s new ethnography of pain, struggle, and hope in modern Japan. Precarious Japan (Duke University Press, 2013) considers the transformations of the relationship between work and life in Japan that followed its social and economic fall after the financial… read more about Anne Allison Precarious Japan »

Selfie Militarism

In late April, an amateur video of Israeli army aggression in the occupied West Bank began to circulate online. The content was neither new nor surprising: a soldier shoving, kicking and pointing his gun at unarmed Palestinian teenagers in Hebron’s old city. What was new, however, was the form and scale of the public response.  Read more read more about Selfie Militarism »

Cultural Anthropology Major Jennifer Sherman Gives Commencement Address

Duke graduating senior Jennifer Sherman delivered the following talk at Duke's 2014 commencement ceremony May 11 in Wallace Wade Stadium: "I'm going to trust you with the truth today. I'm afraid. There's the small fear I feel standing up in front of you. And then there's the fear of leaving, of not knowing what this next chapter is going to look like. In case anyone else was a little afraid, I just wanted you to know you're not alone." Read more read more about Cultural Anthropology Major Jennifer Sherman Gives Commencement Address »