AnthroArt
A podcast by Antropedia / Namla / Ambigrama
97 Episoade
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When We Write We Listen to Ourselves: Letters from the Imaginary Border Between Research and Friendship - Ana Chirițoiu and Izabela Tiberiade
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Material, Social and Political Implications of Work in and beyond Galați, Romania - Gerard A. Weber, Ph.D.
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Migration and Changing Expectations in a Roma Segregated Neighborhood - Remus Gabriel Anghel
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
The Political Ecology of the European Periphery - Lucian Vesalon
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Artificial? Naturally! - Alec Bălășescu
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
“No Such Thing as ‘Can’t’ in the Romanian Railroads”: On Technological Ruination and Creative Maintenance in the Age of Innovation - Adrian Deoancă
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
“It Was Beautiful, Eventually!” Nature and Ruins in Văcărești Nature Park - Călin Cotoi
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Notes for an Anthropology of Plastics - Magdalena Crăciun
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
The Political Ecology of Locked-Down Cities - Lucian Vesalon
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
A Short Introduction to Multispecies Studies and Ethnography - Claudia Câmpeanu
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Is Nature Found Within or Outside of Humans? Discussions from Anthropology and Other Disciplines - Ioana Savin
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Children of Girueta and the Wastelands of Football for All - Andrei Mihail
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Promises and Realities: Working on Digital Platforms - Julius-Cezar MacQuarie
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Uncitizenship through Evictions - Irina Zamfirescu
Publicat: 21.03.2023 -
Reindustrialization, Labor, and Precariousness in Romania: A Case Study of Factories in Baia Mare - Raluca Perneș
Publicat: 20.03.2023 -
An Ethnography of Disappearing Forests. On Power, Politics, and Scapegoats in a Village of Argeș County, Romania - Ștefan Dorondel
Publicat: 17.03.2023 -
The Construction of an Olfactory Other - Ruxandra Păduraru
Publicat: 17.03.2023
AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is an initiative of three applied anthropology organisations – Antropedia, Namla and Ambigrama – that aims to create an international platform for connecting anthropology and art, with the purpose of deepening awareness about inequality and our relation with the environment and driving change across three geographies: Romania, The Netherlands and Portugal, as well as beyond.AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is a two-year project (2023-2024) co-funded by the European Commision, under the Creative Europe Programme (CREA).***Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
