Cultural Anthropology
Ellery Germain
IHSS
Five researcher articles were presented in the article that I read. I think it is very important and actually interesting to learn about. These children live in places where they are around or they are suffering from HIV or Tuberculosis. These researchers elaborating imaginative stories and drawings that represent efforts to provide care for others, despite their constrained social positions.
Jean Hunleth, a researcher, works with Zmbian children who are dealing with or have family members suffering from tuberculosis and HIV. Molly hales is another researcher who studies more with the digital ethnography. “She considers processes and theories of animation in order to explore the ways that mourners experience the recently deceased, discovering, recording, and thereby constituting their presence and ongoing capacity for relationship.” Another researcher is Jason Danely. He offers a close reading of an ethnographic moment, focusing on an urban community’s speculation about a lonely death that precipitates discussions about dwelling, locality, and care in contemporary Japan. “Robert Samet discusses the punitive turn in Venezuela, showing that appeals to the public as victims who have been subjected to a series of wrongs are the grounds on which democracy is being reformulated in populist terms. Such efforts to dehumanize and punish the disenfranchised poses serious challenges to recognition and reform in political action.”
https://journal.culanth.org/index.php/ca/issue/view/53
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