MIT Department of Anthropology

Past Events

MIT Anthropology

Past Events

Nov 22, 2024

CBIKS Indigenous Sciences Speaker Series: Jesse Pirini (Māori) "Weaving Western and Indigenous Business Lenses: Self Determination and Solutions for a Better Society" 

Jesse Pirini (Māori)

Victoria University of Wellington

November 22, 2024 4 - 5:30PM  Virtual

Jesse Pirini (Māori), a Senior Lecturer at the Wellington School of Business and Government at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington in Aotearoa New Zealand and co-Editor for the edited volume Indigenous Management: Knowledges and Frameworks (in press), will be presenting Weaving Western and Indigenous Business Lenses: Self-Determination and Solutions for a Better Society. 

Abstract: Indigenous businesses and organizations are developing approaches to successful management and organization to support self-determination. Indigenous ways of knowing and doing also help address urgent societal challenges including sustainability, climate change, inclusion and innovation. In this presentation Jesse shares practical examples from Aotearoa, New Zealand of Indigenous perspectives braided with popular management thinking to support self-determination. Considering successes, challenges and discussing future pathways for research and practice. 

Nov 7, 2024

Ripe for Change: Cheesemaking in a Shifting Climate - with Heather Paxson

Heather Paxson

MIT

November 7th, 2024 5:30 - 8:00 PM Swissnex, 420 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02138

Join us for an event exploring the future of cheesemaking in the face of climate change, featuring speakers from Switzerland and New England.

As climate change reshapes agriculture and food production across the globe, what does the future hold for cheese? Will sustainable practices for traditional cheesemaking be compatible with our climate goals? Does the future lie with plant-based cheese? This event dives into how producers in Switzerland and New England are rethinking cheesemaking in the face of rapid climate and planetary shifts. Join cheesemakers, sellers, and fellow cheese enthusiasts to explore whether traditional and cutting-edge approaches to cheesemaking can co-exist on our warming planet.

Oct 18, 2024

"Code Work: Hacking across the US/México Techno-Borderlands" Stanford University Center for Latin American Studies book talk with MIT Anthropology Professor Héctor Beltrán

Héctor Beltrán

MIT Anthropology

October 18, 2024 4:30 - 5:30 PM  In person and online: Bolivar House : 582 Alvarado Row, Stanford, CA 94305  |  Stream Online  View stream information

In his book Code Work, Héctor Beltrán examines Mexican and Latinx coders’ personal strategies of self-making as they navigate a transnational economy of tech work.

Oct 16, 2024

Anthro Tea!

10/16/2024 4-5pm E53-335

Come relax with us and enjoy some fun conversation! No need to RSVP; just show up and bring your friends!

Oct 16, 2024

Ocean Calling - a talk with artist Laura Anderson Barbata

Laura Anderson Barbata 

MIT

October 16th, 2024 3:00 - 4:00 PM  E53-354, MIT Anthropology Classroom 

Laura Anderson Barbata will discuss her projects Ocean Calling, 2017, and Ocean Blues, 2018 in greater detail. The Ocean Calling was presented in 2017 at the UN's First Ocean Conference in New York. The following year, in collaboration with artists from the Caribbean diaspora and Mexico, she presented Ocean Blues, a work in response to the effects of global warming on all forms of life that make the ocean their home.

Sep 27, 2024

The Southeast Chicago Archive and Storytelling Project Launch Documentary Screening Southeast: A City within a City with Live Music by Steve Walsh, Coco Gomez, + Matt Goetz

Friday, 9/27/2024 5:30 - 7pm  Bartos Theater,  E15-070 in Wiesner Building 

SOUTHEAST: a city within a city A hands-on exploration of what it felt like to live in a neighborhood that once produced more steel than any other place in the world. The documentary brings together builders, soldiers, scholars, gangsters, musicians, and politicians from the Southeast Side’s past and present to explain what happened to neighborhoods full of life and different cultures after the jobs disappeared. 

Join us for an immersive experience that blends documentary film, live narration, and musical performances. Original music performed live by writer/director Steven Walsh and his grandfather Roger "Coco" Gomez (accompanied on guitar by Matt Goetz)! Friday Sept. 27th at 5:30 in MITs Bartos Theater, Building E15 basement off Ames St.

Sep 26, 2024

Southeast Chicago Archive and Storytelling Project Launch: w/SECASP Director, Chris Walley + screening of Wetlands to Waste documentary

Chris Walley

MIT Anthropology

9/26/2024  4:00 - 5:30pm Panel + Doc Screening  | 5:30pm - 6:30 pm Reception 4:00 - 5:30pm @ The Nexus, 14S-130 in Hayden Library  | 5:30pm - 6:30 pm Walker Lawn outside Building 14 (or 14E-304 if rain)

Thursday Sept. 26th 
4 - 5:30pm @ The Nexus, 14S-130 in Hayden Library  

Please join SECASP Director Prof. Chris Walley and other co-collaborators as they discuss the project and screen segments of the site’s newly launched and final multimedia documentary. Wetlands to Waste explores the environmental history of the multiracial Calumet region and the rise of environmental activism led by Latina, white and black residents against industrial pollution and landfills. Funded in part with grants from the MIT Center for Art, Science & Technology (CAST), National Endowment for the Humanities, and The Donnelly Foundation. 

5:30 - 6:30pm, Walker Lawn outside Building 14 (or 14E-304 if rain)
 Reception on Walker Lawn outside Building 14 (or 14E-304 if rain).


 

Sep 11, 2024

Anthro Tea! 

9/11/24 4-5pm  E53-335L 

Come relax with us and enjoy some fun conversation! No need to RSVP; just show up and bring your friends!

May 8, 2024

MIT Anthro Tea

Wednesday, May 8, 2024 4:00 - 5:00 PM Anthro HQ E53-335

Come relax with us and enjoy some fun conversation! No need to RSVP, just show up and bring your friends!

May 6, 2024

“Seeds of Guamuchil”: Feminist activism-research and a women’s prison writing project in Mexico with Rosalva Aída Hernandez

Rosalva Aída Hernandez

Radcliffe Institute (Harvard)

Monday, May 6, 2024 4:00 - 5:30 PM Margaret Cheney Room, 3-308

Mexican anthropologist Aída Hernández, currently a Fellow at Harvard's Radcliffe Institute, will join us to discuss her feminist activism-research in Mexico through the work of a creative writing project for imprisoned women she has helped lead. The event will feature a screening of a short film about the project: Semillas de Guamúchil (“Five women who discover creative writing in prison share their poetry now in their life at large”). We hope you can join us!

Apr 30, 2024

Elan Abrell's talk "The Ethical and Methodological Challenges of Animal-Centered Ethnography" 

Elan Abrell

Assistant Professor Environmental Studies, Animal Studies, and Science and Technology Studies at Wesleyan University

Tuesday, April 30, 2024 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM E53-354

As a relatively new and evolving field within anthropology, multispecies ethnography challenges traditional human-centric perspectives by engaging with the complex web of relationships between humans and non-human entities, including plants, fungi, and animals.

Apr 29, 2024

Spring 2024 A • H • STS Colloquium - Christopher Heaney "Trepanning Incas: Ancient Peruvian Surgery and American Anthropology's Monroe Doctrine"

Assistant Professor Christopher Heaney

Penn State

Monday, April 29, 2024 4:00 - 5:30 PM E51-095

This lecture reconstructs the process by which "Inca trepanation" became an accepted scientificfact, and the looting and trade in "Inca" and Andean ancestors and crania it relied upon to provide further museum "specimens" to prove or disprove Indigenous skill at this high-risk maneuver. Central to this process was the work of Andean collectors and Peruvian surgeons like the anthropologist Julio C. Tello, whose authority was sought but effaced by Americanist anthropologists in the United States.

Apr 9, 2024

Jason De León Book Talk "Soldiers and Kings: Survival and Hope in the World of Human Smuggling"

Jason De León 

Director Cotsen Institute of Archaeology |  Professor of Anthropology and Chicana/o and Central American Studies UCLA

Tuesday, April 9, 2024 4:00 - 5:30 PM 56-114

In this talk Jason De León will discuss his new book "Soldiers and Kings", a long-term ethnographic study focused on understanding the daily lives of Honduran smugglers who profit from transporting migrants across the length of Mexico. Using the stories of several smugglers, he examines the relationship between transnational gangs and the clandestine migration industry, as well as the difficulties of doing ethnography in this violent and ethically challenging context.

Apr 8, 2024

Pan-American Computing:  Regional Integration and U.S. Corporate Power at the Origins of South American Computer Markets

Colette Perold

Assistant Professor of Media Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder

Monday, April 8, 2024 4:00 - 5:30 PM The Nexus in Hayden Library, 14S-130

Part of A • H • STS speaker series:

This talk from Colette Perold analyzes the role of U.S. empire in the creation of South American markets for tabulating equipment and early mainframe computers. Grounded in two major programs—the 1940 Census of the Americas and the 1960s Latin American Free Trade Association—this talk explores the role of data integration and trade integration as two components of a regional strategy for U.S. corporate dominance over hemispheric tabulating and computing industries.

Apr 5, 2024

HOLLOW TREE - Documentary Film Screening and Q&A with director, producer, + 3 protagonists

Friday, April 5, 2024 2:30 - 4:30 PM The Nexus in Hayden Library, 14S-130

HOLLOW TREE follows three teenagers coming of age in their sinking homeland of Louisiana. Their different perspectives shape their story.

The screening will be followed by a conversation with Director Kira Akerman, Producer Monique Walton, and the 3 protagonists. The Q&A will be moderated by Dr. Kate Brown, Professor of History of Science at MIT’s Program in Science, Technology, and Society.  Seating is limited. Please register.

The event is sponsored by The Living Climate Futures Group at MIT.

Apr 4, 2024

Héctor Beltrán Book Talk "Code Work: Hacking across the US/México Techno-Borderlands" at UCBerkeley Center for Ethnographic Research

Héctor Beltrán

MIT Anthropology

Thursday, April 4, 2024 7 - 8:30 PM EST (4 - 5:30 PM PST)  470 Stephens Hall UC Berkeley / virtual 

The Center for Ethnographic Research at UC Berkeley welcomes MIT Anthropology Class of 1957 Career Development Assistant Professor Héctor Beltrán for a discussion of his book, "Code Work: Hacking across the US/México Techno-Borderlands"

Apr 3, 2024

Anthro Tea

Wednesday, April 3, 2024 4:00 - 5:00 PM Anthro HQ E53-335

Come relax with us and enjoy some fun conversation! No need to RSVP; just show up and bring your friends!

Mar 15, 2024

"Prototyping anthro-engineering for sustainability education and solution-building at MIT and beyond" MCSC Friday Lunch

Friday, March 15, 2024 12:00 - 1:00 PM MCSC Office 105 Broadway (Building NE36) on the 7th floor

Hear from undergraduate students and instructors involved in the MCSC-supported seed award project, “Anthro-Engineering Decarbonization at the Million Person Scale,” about their efforts to bridge anthropology and engineering to explore the design of a culturally appropriate, affordable, and sustainable intervention to create a pathway to decarbonization in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, the coldest and most polluted capital city in the world.

Presenters: Iselle Barrios (’25), Dr. Lauren Bonilla (MIT Anthropology), Grace Gardner (’24), Madeline Hon (’24), Kiran Mak (’25), and Ella Trumper (’24)

Mar 14, 2024

Braiding Knowledges to Transform Science: Climate Change, Cultural Places, and Food Sovereignty research at the Center for Braiding Indigenous Knowledges and Science

Dr. Sonya Atalay

Visiting Professor in MIT Anthropology • Provost Professor of Anthropology at UMass-Amherst • Director, NSF Center for Braiding Indigenous Knowledges and Science

Thursday, March 14th 4:00 - 5:30 PM, Reception to follow in Bldg 56 Lobby 5:30 - 6:00 PM 56-114

Abstract:
How do we bring previously disparate ways of knowing, Indigenous Knowledge and “Western” or mainstream science, into right relationship with one another for mutual thriving of land and culture? At a time of accelerating environmental change and complex, overlapping challenges, we need a plurality of perspectives to innovate solutions. This talk focuses on work being carried out by a team of international, interdisciplinary, predominantly Indigenous scientists from the US, Canada, Australia, and Aotearoa/New Zealand as part of the newly funded Center for Braiding Indigenous Knowledges and Science. I’ll share how our team, which includes archaeologists; climate, environmental, and water scientists; scholars with expertise in Indigenous knowledge systems and education, foodways, and museums and heritage, are collaborating to explore ethical practices and protocols of braiding knowledges, the seeds for building new research worlds. The talk highlights efforts to bring braiding methodologies into mainstream scientific practice through a transdisciplinary approach that reflects Indigenous understandings of place in which the urgent and interconnected areas of climate change, cultural places, and food sovereignty and security are the focus.

Bio:
Dr. Sonya Atalay (Anishinaabe-Ojibwe) is an Indigenous archaeologist, utilizing community-based participatory methods to conduct research in full partnership with Indigenous communities. Dr. Atalay’s scholarship crosses disciplinary boundaries, incorporating aspects of cultural anthropology, archaeology, critical heritage studies, and Native American and Indigenous Studies. She’s currently involved in producing a series of research-based comics about repatriation of Native American ancestral remains, return of sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) law, and is Director of the NSF-funded, multinational Center for Braiding Indigenous Knowledges and Science (CBIKS)