Everyday Anthropology A Better Way to Namasté May 30, 2023 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, commercialism, Everyday Anthropology, Himalayas, namaste, noble savagery, wellness, white alternative spirituality My Stories of Struggle: Anchoring the ‘Personal’ in a Production Preoccupied with the ‘Propriety’ of ‘Science’ October 10, 2022 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, Everyday Anthropology, objectivity, personal, reflexive turn, subjectivity, writing Ad-hoc Block: Dystopian Worlds and the War for Advertising September 26, 2022 / The Familiar Strange / advertising, Blog, capitalism, commercialism, dystopian, Everyday Anthropology, marketing, science fiction Metaphysics Is a Piece of Cake August 29, 2022 / lachlansummers / Blog, capitalism, Everyday Anthropology, metaphysics, social construct, sociality of time, temporal experience, time A Trinket, a Trifle, and a Novel New Disciple: Fandoms and Consecrated Commodities April 11, 2022 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, capitalism, Commodification, Everyday Anthropology, Fandom, identity, pop culture, religion If You’re Seeing This, You Are on Ex-Mormon TikTok October 11, 2021 / Carolyn West / Blog, digital architecture, Everyday Anthropology, Exmo, faith, mormon, post-religious, social media, tiktok Reconnected in a Disconnected World: The Role of Objects in Shaping Practices September 27, 2021 / The Familiar Strange / actor-network theory, ANT, Blog, COVID-19, Everyday Anthropology, Latour, non-humans, objects A Five Course Degustation for the Changing “Australian” Palette June 7, 2021 / Matthew Phung / Blog, cultural identity, Everyday Anthropology, food, identity, representation, sensory anthropology, social change My Divine Pet Rock May 24, 2021 / The Familiar Strange / academia, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, gender, gendered roles, humour, negotiating authority, professionalism What Is Your Worth? Re-evaluating Human Work in An Automated Future March 29, 2021 / Alex D'Aloia / automation, Blog, bullshit jobs, david graeber, Everyday Anthropology, remuneration, social value, value of work, work Navigating Lockdown: What Studying Vipassana Mediation Taught Me About Surviving Melbourne’s Intense Lockdown November 23, 2020 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, COVID-19, Everyday Anthropology, Hot Takes, Liminality, lockdown, meditation, rules, Vipassana Advertising Change: Presenting a New New Zealander? October 26, 2020 / The Familiar Strange / advertising, Blog, demographic change, diversity, Everyday Anthropology, Myths, national identity, New Zealand, social change Blokes and their casual racism June 8, 2020 / Matthew Phung / Blog, casual racism, COVID-19, discrimination, Everyday Anthropology, Hot Takes, microaggression, racism, structural violence How COVID-19 makes us use our bodies differently May 11, 2020 / The Familiar Strange / behavior, behaviour, Blog, COVID-19, Everyday Anthropology, Hot Takes, Marcel Mauss, Pierre Bourdieu, responsibilisation, social distancing, techniques of the body Symbolic confusion and how to flirt with emoji 💋😕 April 13, 2020 / Alex D'Aloia / Blog, emoji, Everyday Anthropology, facebook, language, Science and Technology Studies, semiotics, symbols, technology, translation Collecting Relationships: the Phenomenon of Ooshies November 18, 2019 / Alex D'Aloia / Blog, Economic Anthropology, Everyday Anthropology, exchange, Hot Takes, ooshies, ownership, The Lion King, value Calling it out: Our Australian rules? October 7, 2019 / Kylie Wong Dolan / Adam Goodes, Australian Football League, Australian Rules, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, Indigenous Australia, racism, The Australian Dream, The Final Quater Paying back or paying forward: What does it mean to give? July 1, 2019 / Kylie Wong Dolan / altruism, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, Favours, Gift Giving, Marcel Mauss, pay it forward, payback, Practices of Anthropology, reciprocity, the gift Weeds don’t exist in the wild: What can that tell us about humans? April 8, 2019 / The Familiar Strange / 'auto-rewilder', Anna Tsing, Blog, context, Everyday Anthropology, husbandry, Matter out of Place, plants, weeds How I kicked chronic migraine (And what that has to do with anthropology) March 25, 2019 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / biopsychosocial model, Blog, chronic migraine, chronic pain, digital health, Digital Health Agency, Everyday Anthropology, Facebook Support Groups, health, health promotion, living with chronic pain, medical anthropology, mental health, migraines, psychology, technology Fluid Masculinity: The case of Krishna March 11, 2019 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, Everyday Anthropology, femininity, India, Krishna, Love, masculinity, Radha, Rama, religion, sexuality Compassionate Cannibalism February 11, 2019 / The Familiar Strange / Beth Conklin, Blog, collective mourning, Consuming Grief, Everyday Anthropology, Grief, Wari community, Western Values A Feminist Analysis of Orthodox Dogspotting November 19, 2018 / The Familiar Strange / anthropology of dogs, Blog, dogs, dogspotting, Everyday Anthropology, feminist analysis, Multispecies Ethnography, puppers, social norms, subcultures Encoding Value: What is cryptocurrency, and what does it mean for society? October 4, 2018 / The Familiar Strange / anthropological theories of value, bitcoin, blockchain, Blog, cryptocurrency, Economic Anthropology, Everyday Anthropology, Theories of value, trust, Western Values Is Life What You Make of It? September 6, 2018 / Julia Brown / Blog, choosing to care, Everyday Anthropology, free will, inequity, phenomenology, Sarah Bakewell, social change, structuralism Is Higher Education a “Family-Friendly” Career Choice? August 16, 2018 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / Academia, academic exploitation, academics, Blog, Broad Agenda, Everyday Anthropology, family, family-friendly, higher education, neoliberalism Gender and Mental health: The need for a wider lens August 9, 2018 / Julia Brown / Blog, Broad Agenda, Everyday Anthropology, gender, Hannah Gadsby, mental health, Schizophrenia, Social Anthropology Imagining new imaginaries for the university August 2, 2018 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / Academia, Appreciative Inquiry, Blog, Book Review, Book Reviews, Everyday Anthropology, higher education, imaginaries, Ronald Barnett, The Ecological University, The future of universities, universities What the Tech Sector Could Learn from Anthropology July 19, 2018 / The Familiar Strange / Big Data, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, exclusion, gender, Science and Technology Studies, society, technology The neoliberal university is making us sick: Who’s to blame? June 14, 2018 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / 40-hour-work-week, academia, Academia, academic exploitation, academics, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, higher education, intellectuals, mental health, neoliberalism, Work/Life Balance Talking in Silences May 3, 2018 / Simon Theobald / Blog, disability, Ethics, Everyday Anthropology, family, humanity, intimacy, representation, silence, social health The Facebook Data Scandal and Why Anthropology Should get More Comfortable with Journalism March 22, 2018 / Julia Brown / Blog, Cambridge Analytica, Curiousity, Everyday Anthropology, Helen Garner, Hot Takes, Investigative Journalism, Louis Theroux, Practices of Anthropology, Virginia Haussegger Anthrocasts: When communities speak, listen and learn March 15, 2018 / Ian Pollock / Anthrocasts, anthropology, Blog, Canada, ethnography, Everyday Anthropology, India, podcast, Podcasting, USA Anthropological Reflections on a Family Death February 22, 2018 / The Familiar Strange / Anglo-Australian Funerals, Blog, Death, Everyday Anthropology, Grief, Individualism, reflexivity, Social Anthropology, Spirituality, Tiwi Islander Mortuary Rituals #WhyWeAnth: Answers on World Anthropology Day 2018 February 15, 2018 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / AnthDay2018, anthropology, anthropology community, Be an anthropologist, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, Social Anthropology, Talking Anthropology, why anthropology matters, Why do anthropology?, Why study anthropology?, WhyWeAnth, World Anthropology Day Why YOU Should Be an Academic Cyborg (and Maybe Already Are) January 18, 2018 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / Academia, academics, Blog, cyborgs, distributed cognition, Everyday Anthropology, extended mind, hybrids, technology This New Year, Think About Your Social Health Too January 4, 2018 / Julia Brown / Blog, Everyday Anthropology, intentionality, new year's resolutions, reconciliations, social health, time A Christmas Anth(rop)ology December 21, 2017 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, Christmas, Everyday Anthropology, holidays, identity work, Kinship, mental health, rituals, Social Anthropology, sociality Fieldnotes from the AAS/ASA/ASAANZ Conference 2017 December 14, 2017 / The Familiar Strange / Academia, anthropology, Blog, conferences, disciplines, Everyday Anthropology Anthrocasts: Who’s Talking, Who’s Listening? December 7, 2017 / Ian Pollock / anthropology, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, Listening to Anthropology, podcast, Talking Anthropology Are You Living in Haste? November 16, 2017 / Julia Brown / Academia, academic exploitation, attention, Blog, consumption, distraction, ethnography, Everyday Anthropology, time It’s Not Just Your Parents’ Fault November 1, 2017 / Ian Pollock / blame, Blog, culture, Everyday Anthropology, family, parenting, psychology, Social Anthropology In Agreement with Krista Tippett October 4, 2017 / Julia Brown / Blog, differences, Everyday Anthropology, fear, knowledge, self, similarities, Social Anthropology, Spirituality, why anthropology matters Australian Families: Who’s Counting? August 10, 2017 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / Australia, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, family, Kinship, Multispecies Ethnography Just ‘Cause You Feel It, Doesn’t Mean… July 20, 2017 / Julia Brown / Blog, Everyday Anthropology, Fieldwork Reflections, intuition, Medical Anthropology, OCD, Schizophrenia, Social Anthropology, social spectrums, Superstition Outsource Your Adulting July 13, 2017 / Jodie-Lee Trembath / adulting, Blog, Everyday Anthropology, gender, generations, invisible work, mental health, millennials, society Ethnographers vs ‘Tourists’ June 22, 2017 / Simon Theobald / authenticity, Blog, ethnography, Everyday Anthropology, fieldwork, Fieldwork Reflections, Iran, tourism, Westerners Academic Jargon & Knowledge Exclusion March 23, 2017 / The Familiar Strange / Blog, Everyday Anthropology, exclusion, jargon, knowledge, post-fact era, silos Is Art the Limit of Embracing the Uncomfortable? March 4, 2017 / Julia Brown / access through art, Alt-Right, Blog, Control Left, Everyday Anthropology, politics, psychoanalysis, Trump Experiencing Multiculturalism: When is Diversity, Diverse? January 12, 2017 / Simon Theobald / Blog, diversity, Everyday Anthropology, Iran, multiculturalism, politics, post-fact era, USA, why anthropology matters Related Posts & Pages:Book Review: 'Abject Relations: Everyday Worlds of Anorexia'…Teaching from the Textbooks: An Archaeology of the Current…Taking Stock in California: Inequity & GriefSlutever, Pegging the Patriarchy, and Normalising BDSMShare this:TwitterFacebookLike this:Like Loading...