ethnography

Afterlives of Muslim Asia: 2022-2023

Afterlives of Muslim Asia: 2022-2023

The data collated is largely gathered through individuals with members of diaspora Afghans from a variety of religious backgrounds, including those identifying as Muslim, Sikh, Hindu and Jewish. The study focuses on diaspora settings in which these communities are especially established, notably London and New York. Individuals were selected to be interviewed on the basis of their playing an active role in the life of the communities and also on the basis of ethnographic fieldwork undertaken by the researcher. The data also includes a discussion of the ethnographic work undertaken by the researcher in the form of a series of reports. Included also are notes in a book on Afghanistan’s Hindu community (translated from Persian).

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Afterlives of Urban Muslim Asia: Muslim Perspectives on Non-Muslim Minorities in Aleppo, and Life Histories of Aleppine Armenians in Kuwait, 2022-2024

Afterlives of Urban Muslim Asia: Muslim Perspectives on Non-Muslim Minorities in Aleppo, and Life Histories of Aleppine Armenians in Kuwait, 2022-2024

Questionnaires in Arabic were distributed electronically to Muslim residents and former residents of popular / working-class (sha‘bi) quarters of Aleppo through an Arab Muslim former resident of the Hilluk district of Aleppo who had migrated to Gaziantep during the Syrian civil war (2012-). Life history interviews were also conducted with prominent Aleppine Armenian members of the Armenian community in Kuwait: the priest of the Armenian church in Aleppo, and two leading Syrian Armenian merchants who run successful businesses in Kuwait and play a prominent role in the Armenian community there.

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The James Madison Carpenter Collection Online Catalogue

The James Madison Carpenter Collection Online Catalogue

The James Madison Carpenter Collection is a major collection of traditional song and drama, plus some items of traditional instrumental music, dance, custom, narrative and children’s folklore, from England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland and the USA, documented in the period 1927-55.

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Concepts Have Teeth, And Teeth That Bite Through Time

Concepts Have Teeth, And Teeth That Bite Through Time

The site features artists living on Blackfoot territory in Canada and in the U.K. who are connected with mootookakiossin.ca, a project that shares the knowledge from historical Blackfoot items held in British museum collections. In some cases, the connection is direct, such as Blackfoot artists who are creating new artworks informed by their ancestor’s items imagery and techniques. For all the artwork you will find here, Mootookakio’ssin supports artists in addressing the legacies of colonialism that museum practices can reveal, the relationship between physical and digital artworks, and how identity is entangled with these practices. While creating this site, we asked ourselves how the design could encourage an experience of the creative works that interrupted typical art-viewing like you might find at a gallery or museum as well as counter the disembodied experience of viewing art online. It was important to encourage interaction with the works so we added lots of paths for you to follow. We replaced straight lines with curving ones and tried to create a sense of depth and space. We really wanted to get beyond a digital exhibition space as just a virtual white wall.

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