Monday, November 9, 2009

For your Calendar

  • Wednesday, November 11th:  The Making of the Documentary APPALACHIA
  • Friday, November 20th:  Department of Anthropology Talk:  Modes of Immigrant Citizenship and Civic Engagement."
See below for more information...
 ______________________________________________________
Film makers Ross Spears and Jamie Ross will be at UKY this Wednesday
11/11 to share the story of the making of their monumental four-part
documentary "APPALACHIA."

"APPALACHIA provides a window onto the defining question of our age;
how to use the land to provide the needs of today and at the same time
preserve it for the future. The story of Appalachia is the story of
our struggle as a people to find our true and proper relationship to
the natural world." www.appalachiafilm.org

Please join us for their presentation and stay to celebrate their
accomplishments at a reception following the discussion.
Where: Patterson Office Tower, 18th Floor
When: Wednesday, November 11, 3 pm to 5 pm.
This event is co-sponsored by the Appalachian Center, the Appalachian
Studies program, Abercrombie Visiting Artists Endowment & UK Art
Department, and the Lexington Film League.

Here is what reviewers are saying about APPALACHIA:
Years in the making by filmmakers, Jamie Ross and Ross Spears,
APPALACHIA: A History of Mountains and People transcends the usual
media portraits of poverty, pity, depravity and the picturesque in
America's most misunderstood and maligned region, and delivers a
breathtaking view of Appalachia's extraordinary role in shaping our
country...[I]t couldn't be more timely. A breakthrough journey! –Jeff
Biggers, The Huffington Post.

APPALACHIA could be the beginning of a cure for society's malignant
attitude about the region. An engrossing and beautifully filmed and
illustrated series APPALACHIA is both a paean to and an investigation
of the world's oldest mountains. It gives first billing to the
mountains themselves—the "soul and spine" of a people as diverse as
any, but bound by a heart tug for "home" that's all about being an
underdog who knows a superior beauty. --Diana Nelson Jones,
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

____________________________________________________________
The Department of Anthropology is pleased to announce a talk by
Caroline B. Brettell, who will be speaking about her work with Asian
Indians in Dallas in a talk called, "Modes of Immigrant Citizenship
and Civic Engagement."

The talk will take place Friday, 20 November 2009 at 4:00 PM in Young
Library Auditorium. This is the second event in the Department of
Anthropology Colloquium Series. This presentation will draw on Dr.
Brettell's recent research on citizenship and civic engagement among
Asian Indians in Dallas. First emphasizing some theoretical issues and
then moving into ethnography, she will elaborate on how a communities
of practice model can be used to study contexts within which
participatory citizenship is learned.

Professor Brettell (Ph.D. Brown University, 1978) is a highly
accomplished scholar who has published numerous books and articles,
held a number of leadership positions in her institution and field,
and received many awards. Her research focuses on migration and
ethnicity, folk religion, and cross-cultural perspectives on gender.
See below for more detailed biographical information.
This colloquium is sponsored by the Department of Anthropology, the
International Studies Program, the Indian Studies Program, and the
College of Arts & Sciences.
All are welcome!
Please see attached for a flyer and two sample articles. Distribution
of this email, announcing the talk in classes, and posting of the
flyer is encouraged!
------------------------------------
Caroline Brettell joined the Southern Methodist University faculty in
1988 and since 2003 has held the title of Dedman Family Distinguished
Professor in the Department of Anthropology. In 2008 she was named a
University Distinguished Professor. She served as Chair of the
Department of Anthropology from 1994-2004. From 1989-1994 she served
as Director of Women's Studies at Southern Methodist University. She
was President of the Faculty Senate in AY 2001-2002 and a Member of
the SMU Board of Trustees. She has served on numerous Dedman College
and University Committees and from 2006-2006 served as Dean ad interim
of Dedman College.

Brettell is an internationally-known specialist on immigration. She is
the author of Men Who Migrate, Women Who Wait: Population and History
in a Portuguese Parish (1986), We Have Already Cried Many Tears: The
Stories of Three Portuguese Migrant Women (1982, 1995), and
Anthropology and Migration: Essays on Transnationalism, Ethnicity and
Identity (2003); co-author with Richard Brettell of Painters and
Peasants in the 19th Century (1983); editor of When The Read What We
Write: The Politics of Ethnography (1993), and Crossing
Borders/Constructing Boundaries: Race, Ethnicity and Immigration
(2006); co-editor of International Migration: The Female Experience
(1986), Gender in Cross-Cultural Perspective (1993, 1997, 2001, 2005),
Gender and Health: An International Perspective (1996), Migration
Theory: Talking Across Disciplines (2000 and 2008), Citizenship,
Immigration and Belonging: Immigrants in Europe and the United States
(2008), and Twenty-First Century Gateways: Immigrant Incorporation in
Suburban America (2008). She is also the author of numerous book
chapters and articles.

In recent years, with funding from the National Science Foundation and
the Russell Sage Foundation, she has been engaged in research on new
immigration into the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area. She has been
interested in aspects of economic, social and political incorporation.
She and anthropologist Deborah Reed-Danahay (co-PI on the Russell Sage
Foundation project) are currently completing a book comparing aspects
of civic engagement among Vietnamese and Asian Indian immigrants.
--

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