A woman in Pakistan sentenced to death for falling in love becomes a rare survivor of the country's harsh judicial system.
Director: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
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A woman in Pakistan sentenced to death for falling in love becomes a rare survivor of the country's harsh judicial system.
Director: Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy
Any Style You Like 4409 5th Avenue in Sunset Park, Brooklyn Instagram | Zine
Some writers choose complicated language not only to plump up their ideas, but to mask their absence, hoping that turgidity will impress those who confuse difficulty with substance. When we don’t know what we are talking about, our first recourse is usually to put up a smokescreen of big words in long sentences.
Joseph Williams, Style: Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace (via literary-ethnography)
New Jersey—or have found their experiences illuminating.
Frederick Wiseman's 40th documentary IN JACKSON HEIGHTS is about the racially and ethnically diverse neighborhood of Jackson Heights in Queens, New York.
Farrah Jarral examines how the end of empire brought a dramatic change of mindset.
Photographer Captures the Beautifully Kaleidoscopic Ceilings of Mosques
Artist Pays Latino Day Workers Hourly Wage To Sit For A Portrait
Vincent Crapanzano on “Postcolonial theory and psychological anthropology”
The ethnographer, like the artist, is engaged in a special kind of vision quest through which a specific interpretation of the human condition, an entire sensibility, is forged. Our medium, our canvas, is “the field,” a place both proximate and intimate (because we have lived some part of our lives there) as well as forever distant and unknowably “other” (because our own destinies lie elsewhere). In the act of “writing culture,” what emerges is always a highly subjective, partial, and fragmentary — but also deeply felt and personal — record of human lives based on eyewitness and testimony. The act of witnessing is what lends our work its moral (at times its almost theological) character. So-called participant observation has a way of drawing the ethnographer into spaces of human life where she or he might really prefer not to go at all and once there doesn’t know how to go about getting out except through writing, which draws others there as well, making them party to the act of witnessing.
Nancy Scheper-Hughes, Death Without Weeping (via literary-ethnography)
In resisting synthetic ends and making openings rather than truths, ethnographic practice allows for an emancipatory reflexivity and for a more empowering critique of the rationalities, interventions, and moral issues of our times.
João Biehl, “Ethnography in the Way of Theory”
(http://www.culanth.org/articles/713-ethnography-in-the-way-of-theory)
A colorful look behind China’s New Year celebrations
The spectacle of China’s longest public holiday doesn’t just happen overnight