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讲 座 信 息

主题:Publishing as Anthropological Exchanges

时间:2024年4月18日(周五)13:30-15:30

地点:浙江大学紫金港西区成均苑8幢1127

简介:This roundtable brings together four leading editors whose expertise spans transcontinental dialogues, pluralistic academic traditions, and diverse institutional ecologies. The discussion is organized around three thematic axes related to journal editors' rolespersonal trajectories, editorial discussions, and challenges in the global exchange of ideas & scholarship. Through these themes, the panelists will explore how journals serve as dynamic conduits for anthropological knowledge. Also, with their intersectional perspectives, the panelists will pose questions to and for each other within the evolving landscape of academic publishing. By weaving these threads, the roundtable aims to foster collective reflections on how publishing practices nurture our discipline's pluriversal futures.


主讲人:

Elizabeth Chin   American Anthropologist 主编

     American Anthropologist 副主编、香港理工大学应用社会科学系副教授

梁永佳   《人类学研究》主编、浙江大学求是特聘教授

Jan Harm Schutte  Signs and Society 副主编、浙江大学社会学系新百人计划研究员

 

主持人:

沈阳  浙江大学社会学系新百人计划研究员

 

Elizabeth Chin is editor in chief of American Anthropologist, the flagship journal of the American Anthropological Association. She has published widely on race and racism, children and childhood, and material culture.  Her books include Purchasing Power: Black Kids and American Consumer Culture, and My Life With Things: The Consumer Diaries.

 

Jan Harm Schutte is Assistant Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Sociology at Zhejiang University. He also serve as Associate Editor for Signs and Society (Cambridge University Press). His first monograph is titled, Angloscene: Compromised Personhood in Afro-Chinese Translations. His work has appeared in The Journal of Linguistic Anthropology, Positions, Signs and Society, and Social Dynamics. His current research interests include ethnographic projects on: Jiujitsu and Masculine  Self-Cultivation Sino-American Translation; the semiotics of dynamic motion and motion text in a variety of trans-cultural aesthetic spaces; and mass-communication disorders and public order in Post-Apartheid South Africa.

 

LIANG Yongjia is the Qiushi Distinguished Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Sociology and the Director of the Institute of Anthropology at Zhejiang University. He also serves as Editor-in-Chief of Renleixue Yanjiu (Anthropological Studies). Beyond his numerous Chinese-language publications, his work has appeared in American Anthropologist, Religions, China Review, The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, and with Routledge. His current research interests include social scientific knowledge production, religion and nation-building, and the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

 

Yang Zhan is an associate professor of cultural anthropology in the Department of Applied Social Sciences at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University and currently serves as the associate editor of American Anthropologist. Her research interests encompass urbanization and migration, mobility and temporality, voluntarism, and anthropological theory. Zhan's articles have been published in journals such as Urban Studies, Cities, Positions, American Anthropologist, Dialectical Anthropology, China Information, and Pacific Affairs, among others.