Apart from losing my computer and my favorite glove, the past few weeks have been fairly uneventful. I returned from Sydney, where I attended panel sessions, lectures, and met some grad students and scholars working in various fields interested in bodies. Most of the keynote speakers were
I was rather disappointed, however, in the presentation of several of the papers. I was expecting, talks given on recent projects or theoretical explorations of these research interests. On the contrary, most people read, in monotone, from papers they had written for the conference. Most of these presentations were littered with philosophical and postmodernist jargon, most of which I found difficult to navigate. Even in the instances where I was familiar with the theoretical underpinnings, I had to work very hard to follow lines of argument presented in a style that, I feel, should be reserved for written articles only. Nevertheless, throughout all of this intense naval-gazing and mental masturbation, I mined out some morsels of wisdom and was introduced to new theorists, scholars, and avenues of thought that I had yet to encounter.
Another surprise was that I was the only anthropologist there. Most came from cultural studies or philosophy or literary theory. And though this was a conference organized around the theoretical term/framework of somatechnics, I found there was an overwhelming lack of the empirical in some of the presentations. I found those papers most satisfying that related field work or interviews to our theoretical themes. Of note: a paper on traditional dress, colonialism, the church, and Greenland national identity; a talk given on the rising fad of designer vagina surgeries and the websites that advertise them; a talk given by two American scholars on disabled bodies and the
Despite being stuck in a hotel for three days, I did manage to see some of Syndey. I went out for drinks and sushi with the students from Melbourne, explored the harbor and opera house with Jenny and her
Nevertheless, as we navigated the area, Jenny and I visited a local pub and sampled their excellent home-made brews, had dim sum in the highly Asian suburb in which she lived, were attacked by cockatoos in the botanical gardens, had a bite in Darlinghurst, and explored the book stores and coffee shops of Newtown. All in all, I really enjoyed my time being a tourist with Jenny and seeing a new country and culture so different from the reserved, calm, and provincial Kiwi life in Christchurch.
Dana
Photos courtesy of Jenny Korns . . . (I never saw a Koala; my photos went the way of the
Powerbook)
1 comment:
I really was able to get the flavor of your conference and Sydney. I like the photos so thanks (and hi) to Jenny! Keep writing, it brings us closer to you and NZ.
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