Coffee Thursday @ 10:00AM at the AAAs

I’m leaving for Philadelphia and the annual American Anthropological Association meeting on Wednesday. My workshop Taking Anthropology Online is Thursday at 12:00. But I’d also like to use the meeting to talk with people about neuroanthropology.

So if you want to get together, I’m planning to be at the Starbucks in the Marriott at 10AM on Thursday. Leave me a comment below or send me an email at dlende at nd dot edu. Or just feel free to come by – here’s some photos of me if you don’t know what I look like. It should be a chance to network, as well as talk about our encultured brains.

Hope to see some of you soon!

-Daniel Lende

Anything but flat: A book review

The Power of Place_Harm de BlijThe Lancet’s recent commission on the effects of climate change on health[i] is a reliable diagnosis of pertinent contemporary issues on a global scale. One of the conclusions of this report is that “The most urgent need is to empower poor countries, and local government and local communities everywhere” (Costello et al.  2009:1728).  It is a conclusion to which Human geographer Harm de Blij also leads his readers in his  recent book, The Power of Place [ii] .

For provocative thought, scope, and endeavour, the book is unquestionably comparable to the works of Jared Diamond, Tim Flannery and James Lovelock. De Blij successfully, cleverly and effectively covers matters of politics, economics, climate, religion, education, human languages, natural disasters, health, gender issues, urbanization and globalization. He integrates these issues into a digestible and relevant description of contemporary cultural landscapes.

De Blij demonstrates an acute awareness of the historical context of his subject matter whilst developing his arguments. His approach to contentious issues and sensitive polemics at times may seem brash; however the treatment is conscientiously balanced, with biases explicit.  It is hard to tackle these subjects dispassionately. To de Blij’s merit, he rarely extends further than an evenhanded evaluation of the data that leaves the reader reflecting if the judgment calls are not indeed fair. His ability to impartially juggle with the contingencies of cultural geography without resorting to simplified cause-and-effect rationalisations, may in fact be de Blij’s genius.

I give the book 4.5 neurons.

Full neuronFull neuronFull neuronFull neuron    Half Neuron

The following post is my first draft of a book review that has been published by Anthropology and Medicine. It includes points and viewpoints that are not necessarily academic in style, but that I would nonetheless like to share with you on this blog. I strongly reccomend readers to read both the published book review and the book, “The Power of Place”.

 

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