Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Still kicking...
Here's a puzzle for the more materially inclined: any connection between these two images?
The first is a petroglyph of Native American origin (Western Abenaki?) from Vermont of unknown date. The second is a gravestone from Rowley, Massachusetts carved about 1690. The more I investigate the nature of intra-cultural exchange in seventeenth-century New England, the more I'm tending to think, yes. The problem is, there is little to no evidence to back up a connection.
On a more upbeat note, here is my ethnographic observation of the summer: I was driving through Cranston en route to Greene Farm one morning (I did a little work out there with Krysta, et al.), when what to my wondering eyes should appear, but a six?-year-old being walked by a pug. In this strange role-reversal, the child was running from side to side on the sidewalk while this little proud dog strutted along in front, tail up. While I can't necessarily get on board with the painful lack of parental oversight, I wholeheartedly approve of sending rambunctious children to be herded by more intelligent animals.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
personal is political
I’ve come to understand
Accordingly, my compadres and I refer to each other as co-mother and co-father of my goddaughter and godson (and I’ll be a co-mother for a third time before I leave). Unfortunately, my co-mothers -- and many other women friends -- are in physically, emotionally and psychologically abusive relationships. One morning, I came into the kitchen to fix breakfast and my co-mother burst in, sobbing. She had just been beaten and told to get out, to leave. For the next couple of hours, she unloaded years of emotional abuse, betrayal and infidelity, her pregnancy at 16 and the loss of that baby, her deepening entrapment in a dependent and abusive relationship with her husband, my co-father.
Family violence is extremely common in
While historically there is relatively little incidence of street violence or violent robberies, signs of violence and retribution increasingly abound. For example, I’m including here some photos of the warnings against possible thieves that are found on nearly every block of El Alto, often accompanied by a dummy hung in effigy, which communicates the warning “this could be you.” Spray-painted across adobe walls are inscriptions such as "Thief, You will be Lynched." Also common, "Thief, you will be burned alive."*
Susanita
* For one interpretation of lynching in
Friday, July 11, 2008
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
When in Rome - do as the Romans?
Hello everyone!
My apologies for taking soo long to post. Well, it's been a whirlwind of a stay here in Rome. Let me begin by saying that Rome is HUGE, super hot and muggy - a veritable concrete jungle. I have had the good fortune of getting lost on the massive public transportation system a number of times, but have recovered in one piece ... my feet may say otherwise if asked. Yesterday, there was a national transportation strike, so moving the old fashioned way was rather useful. Since my arrival, I have been overwhelmed with people's (mostly migrants) willingness to talk about ageing, eldercare, and the migrant women who work as caregivers or badanti. Finding Italians - that is, children in their 50s-60s who have either opted to use the services of a badanti, or have chosen to care for their elderly parents, themselves, has been more of a challenge. To quote an Italian priest whose help I sought to try and find some of these Italians, "You want to speak to the children of the elderly? That's going to be very difficult - they are all very busy you know." Things are moving along, though. Through some family contacts here, I am inching in on this community. Not surprisingly, it is mostly women who coordinate the care of their elderly parents. I've asked about the role of Italian men, and the usual response is that Italian men don't think to be coordinators of care - not that they necessarily wouldn't do this job, it is just not something that they expect to do.
Growing older in Italy doesn't appear to be a well-received phenomenon. Most of the functional elderly (late 70s/80s) that I have interviewed have said that they would much rather be on the other side already. A typical response goes something like Really, what am I doing here, except taking up space and costing money. Among younger Italians (50s/60s), there is a hope that they will not live that long, although most expect that they will, given the current phenomenon. The 50s/60s Italians are a busy group with a number of extra-curricular activities that I cannot imagine keeping track of. There are book clubs, choir rehearsals, as well extra gatherings of such groups, just to "get together." Those that are grandparents among this age group like playing the part of grandparent, but also enjoy having their own time.
There is a senior social center near the apartment where I live that I try to frequent at least once a week in the evening when it is most active. A decent number of "seniors" that frequent the center aren't people that I would consider seniors at all, but rather early retirees by American standards. It is a challenge to think of somebody in their late 50s and early 60s as a senior citizen. Most Sunday mornings I frequent a Ukrainian congregation, and then a Latin American congregation in the afternoon. I've also frequented a Filipino congregation Thursdays. Nevertheless, I think that the strongest links that I have built among the migrant communities have been among the Ukrainians, which is fabulous, considering that most of the women who work as badanti are from the Ukraine. Contact with the Romanian community, which is the migrant community that I originally thought would be accessible, has been limited.
Highlights
- I "learned" how to dance the tango at the senior center;
- I've twice been offered jobs as a babysitter and as a badante; it is an interesting time to look ethnic in Italy, since most Latin American women work as caregivers or domestic workers;
- If I had more time, I might have given it a go, although I have to admit that the job of being with an elderly person 24 hours a day, almost seven days a week with only Thursday afternoons and and all of Sunday off seems quite daunting;
- Rome is full of migrants from all over the world it seems, and at times, the tension created by the need for migrants, especially caregivers, and the lack of regularization of such migrants, is palpable;
- Most migrant women that I spoke with have stated that although the Italians have told them that they are considered family, this is usually only the case until she does something that doesn't fit well with the expectations of the Italian family (i.e. finding a better paying job, and announcing that she is leaving the family);
- The Italians that I have spoken with are split regarding whether they would consider the badante as a member of the famliy; it depends on how family is defined - to paraphrase The line between being considered family is difficult because you are paying somebody to not only meet the physical needs of your parents, but to keep your parent company, which is a family expectation, no?
Hope everyone is doing well. : D
Saturday, July 5, 2008
Sight-scapes
Thursday, July 3, 2008
Morales and food prices...
I wanted to respond to Sohini’s blog post about people attributing the hike in food prices to the rains (rather than the rise in oil prices, or other possible reasoning) because it’s on many people’s minds here, where people's views on rising food prices are tied to their critique of – or continued hope in – Bolivia’s first indigenous president, Evo Morales.
For Luis, Lourdes and others with whom I’ve spoken, the rise in food prices is viewed as a threat to the stability of the Morales Administration, especially as social and political conflicts are on the rise and the President faces a vote of (no)confidence on August 10th. Morales supporters fear that food prices will cut-short the kinds of structural changes they hoped would come from
How You Dey?
Instead I've spent most of my time just getting used to operating around here, ie following around Katie (the advanced grad student from Brown who has opened up her life, contact book, and everything else to share with me, for those readers beyond the cohort, if you are out there). We spent our first week in Abuja at the home of a top dog from the American Embassy, so, needless to stay, living conditions were far beyond those than my home in Providence, with wireless internet (like I said, my excuse for the delay is poor), a swimming pool, a chef and live-in masseuse /housekeeper. Since then, it's been a gradual shift to life something more like that of most Nigerians, culminating in a week in Kano, where we stayed in the family compound of Katie's good friends/research assistants/everything else.
Like so many other places around Nigeria, the house was clearly a very nice one when it was built during the oil boom in the 1970s, but has since become only a shell--wired for electricity that comes for only a few minutes a day and piped for water that hasn't come in years. So I learned how to most efficiently "flush" toilets with buckets of water kept in barrels throughout the house, and to bathe with buckets as well, appreciating the cool water in the heat of the north. Of course I didn't learn much Hausa at all, but the family was always amused when I could manage a greeting or two, and I did pick up at least Katie's interpretation of Nigerian English, with rhthmic intonations and a few words of pidgin thrown in. Katie also didn't hesitate to introduce me to all her favorite local foods, which most foreigners (and even many Nigerians) balk at, from slimy okra soups eaten by scooping up bland sticky starches like pounded yams with your fingers, to spicy and delicious beef kabobs ("suya") made on make-shift barbecues the side of the road. (As I type I'm having a typical meal of a big pile of carbs, this time the ubiquitous Nigerian version of Ramen, IndoMie, which is virtually identical except for some extra kick common to most Nigerian foods.) Unfortunately my stomach hasn't learned to love these as quickly as my taste buds have, and that can be complicated in a country without public toilets, but this, I like to tell myself, is a rite of passage of its own, and I'll leave that at that.
On the actual fieldwork front, my expat connections through Katie had me well connected at the American Embassy and I'll begin pursuing all those phone numbers and introductions now that we are back in Abuja. I did manage one intense day of work before we left Kano, after a local professor hooked me up with a super determined and well-conntected Nigerian PhD student. Unfortunately, after waiting for hours for his good friend who could probably write my MA paper for me, he turned out to be out of town, making us take the formal bureaucratic route to talk to anyone. This eventually led to a spontaneous "interview" (that felt more like an inquisition) with the big men of the traders' association in the middle of the market as a crowd grew around us. I was completely overwhelmed and had no idea how difficult it would be to try to talk meaningfully at any length through an interpreter, especially one not trained or inclined to give more thorough translations beyond the immediate and summarized answer to my question. I don't know if any of you are having to figure this out (Láura maybe?), but even once I start recording everything to get the details later, it totally hinders any anthropological ideal of interviewing as conversational when you can't catch the interesting details of responses as they arise. But even though they all seemed totally suspicious and unhappy about my interests there, I am assured that I will be welcomed to talk to more people in the future, even on-one-one and with tape recorders, so I have that to look forward to when I return to Kano.
In the meantime, I am back in Abuja for at least a week or two, staying in another palatial expat house with too many rooms to spare. Katie is off to South Africa on Saturday so I will officially be on my own starting then. While I look forward to some more independence, I know even small things will will turn into adventures, from trying to negotiate taxi fares to knowing where to go for different necessities (ie chocolate, internet, and suya). These adventures, of course, should provide good fodder for blogging, which will also be easier here in Abuja given the more reliable electricity that is readily supplemented with the steady hum of generators. That said, I won't let this turn into a one-woman show, so hopefully I'll see some more activity on here soon or I'll even withhold my contributions in protest. I'm sure that threat is stinging, so get to it. I hope all is well out in your respective worlds, and I look forward to hearing about them soon!
PS The wireless connection at this "cafe" is too slow for me to upload my photos, but hopefully I'll find a place to do that soon.
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
Monsoons, Mangoes and Markets
Monsoons have been making occasional appearances in my interviews in the marketplaces too, where people have cited the rains as reasons for price fluctuations rather than oil prices, etc. that the newspapers have focused on. So rain is good to think with right now...
In other news, mangoes are delicious as ever and I'm discovering that it takes a lot longer to transcribe interviews in Bengali than I had imagined.