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Reading Arjun Appadurai

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Title: Reading Arjun Appadurai


1
Reading Arjun Appadurais
  • Disjuncture and Difference in the
  • Global Cultural Economy.
  • Facilitation
  • Yasmeen Ahmad

2
Background on Appadurai
  • Bio, Research, Teaching and involvement with
  • Public Culture Magazine

3
Bio
  • Arjun Appadurai is a socio-cultural
    anthropologist with specializations in
    globalization, public culture, and urban studies.
    His major accomplishment has been the
    construction of anthropological frameworks for
    the study of global media, consumption, and
    migration. His current work focuses on poverty,
    violence, and social inclusion in mega-cities
    with a special focus on Mumbai (India).
    www.appadurai.com

4
Research
  • Library Research, Indian Office Library and
    British Museum, London, 1974, 1977.
  • Ethnographic and archival research in Madras,
    India, Summer 1977 and 1973-74.
  • Fieldwork in rural Maharashtra State, India,
    1981-82.
  • Fieldwork in Madras, Bombay and Delhi, Winter
    1986 and Winter 1988 (short-term).
  • Fieldwork in Bombay, Winter 1995-96, Fall 1997,
    Spring 1998.
  • Fieldwork in India, South Africa, Philippines,
    1999 present

  • www. appadurai.com

5
Teaching
  • During his teaching career, Arjun Appadurai has
    taught graduate and undergraduate students a wide
    range of courses including courses on the
    Anthropology of Modernity, on Ethnic Violence in
    Global Perspective and on the study of South
    Asia.
  • John Dewey Professor in the Social Sciences, New
    School University (2004 - present)
  • William K. Lanman Jr. Professor of International
    Studies at Yale University (Prof. of
    Anthropology, Political Science and Sociology)
  • Director and Chair, Center for Cities and
    Globalization (2002 - 2004)
  • Samuel N. Harper Distinguished Service Professor,
    University of Chicago (2001-2002)
  • Director, Globalization Project
  • Professor of Anthropology
  • Professor of South Asian Languages and
    Civilizations (1996-2002)
  • Director, Chicago Humanities Institute, and
    Barbara E. and Richard J. Franke Professor in the
    Humanities, University of Chicago (1992-96)
  • Professor of Anthropology, University of
    Pennsylvania (1987-92) and Consulting Curator,
    Asian Section, University Museum, University of
    Pennsylvania
  • Associate Professor of Anthropology, University
    of Pennsylvania (1981-87)
  • Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University
    of Pennsylvania (1976-1981)
  • www. appadurai.com

6
A founding editor of Public Culture
  • Public Culture seeks a critical understanding
    of the global cultural flows and the cultural
    forms of the public sphere which define the late
    twentieth century. As such, the journal provides
    a forum for the discussion of the places and
    occasions where cultural, social, and political
    differences emerge as public phenomena,
    manifested in everything from highly particular
    and localized events in popular or folk culture
    to global advertising, consumption, and
    information networks.

  • www.publicculture.org

7
Appadurais Framework for a Global Cultural
Economy
8
Theoretical gaps and new framework
  • Gaps
  • Centre-periphery models
  • Models of push and pull in migration theory
  • Models of surplus and deficits in models of
    balance of trades
  • Issues of consumer and producer in Neo-Marxist
    theories of development
  • Marxist global development theory
  • The complexity of the current global economy
    has to do with certain fundamental disjunctures
    between economy, culture and politics which we
    have barely begun to theorize. (p. 296)

9
Themes and constructs
  • Globalization- focus on cultural dimensions
  • Power- operating from multiple centres, not
    centre
  • Agency-suggests different kinds of indigenization
    occurring
  • Diversity- of experiences, locations, identities,
    relationships
  • Intersections-consistently changing between
    scapes
  • Identity/Citizenship - shifting, multiple,
    imagined, transnational
  • Difference- in discussion and explanation of
    third world
  • Access-visual suggestion, imagination, realities
  • Authority- challenges Enlightenment world view
    and master narrative
  • Technology-moving images meet mobile audiences
  • Publics- multiply located counterpublics being
    created and dissolving

10
Leading constructCultural dimensions of
globalization
  • I propose that an elementary framework for
    exploring such disjunctures is to look at the
    relationship between five dimensions of global
    cultural flow which can be termed (a)
    ethnoscapes (b) mediascapes (c) technoscapes
    (d) finanscapes and (e) ideoscapes.
  • (p. 296)

11
Five dimensions of global cultural flow.
12
Ethnoscapes
  • By ethnoscape, I mean the landscape of
    persons who constitute the shifting world in
    which we live tourists, immigrants, refugees,
    exiles, guestworkers and other moving groups and
    persons constitute an essential feature of the
    world, and appear to affect the politics of and
    between nations to a hitherto unprecedented
    degree. (p. 297)

13
Ethnoscapes
  • Appadurai consistently provides diverse range of
    examples of actors in scapes, bringing range of
    identities and locations into this conversation
    and emphasizing fluidity of identities globally.
  • What is more, both these
  • realities as well as these fantasies now
    function on larger scales, as men and women from
    villages in India think not just of moving to
    Poona or Madras, but of moving to Dubai and
    Houston, and refugees from Sri Lanka find
    themselves in South India as well as Canada, just
    as the Hmong are driven to London as well as
    Philadelphia... (middle of p.297)

14
Technoscapes
  • By technoscape, I mean the global
    configuration, also ever fluid, of technology,
    and of the fact that technology, both high and
    low, both mechanical and informational, now moves
    at high speeds across various kinds of previously
    impervious boundaries. (p.297)

15
Technoscapes
  • Appadurai addresses how technoscapes now exist
    across boundaries and are increasingly fluid,
    irregular and driven by complex
    interrelationships.
  • Many countries now are the roots of
    multinational enterprise a huge steel complex in
    Libya may involve interests from India, China,
    Russia and Japan...the odd distribution o
    technologies, and thus the peculiarities of these
    technoscapes are increasingly driven not by any
    obvious economies of scale, of political control,
    or of market rationality, but of increasingly
    complex relationships between money flows,
    political possibilities and the availability of
    low and highly-skilled labor. (p.297-298)

16
Finanscapes
  • ...it is useful to speak as well of
    finanscapes, since the disposition of global
    capital is now a more mysterious, rapid and
    difficult landscape to follow than every before,
    as currency markets, national stock exchanges,
    and commodity speculations more mega-monies
    through national turnstiles at blinding speed,
    with vast absolute implications for small
    differences in percentage points and time units.
    (p. 298)

17
Finanscapes
  • Appadurai reinforces critical point that
    relationships between scapes are unpredictable
    and that theorizing the global political economy
    requires acknowledging shifting relationships.
  • the critical point is that the global
    relationship between ethnoscapes, technoscapes
    and finanscapes is deeply disjunctive and
    profoundly unpredictable...thus even an
    elementary model of global political economy must
    take into account the shifting relationship
    between perspectives on human movement,
    technological flow and financial transfers which
    can accommodate their deeply disjunctive
    relationships with one another. ( bottom of
    p.298)

18
Mediascapes
  • Mediascapes refer both to the distribution of
    the electronic capabilities to produce and
    disseminate information (newspapers, magazines,
    television stations, film productions studios,
    etc.) which are now available to a growing number
    of private and public interests throughout the
    world and to the images of the world created by
    these media... (bottom of p.298)

19
Mediascapes
  • Appadurai theorizes on the complexity of how
    forms of media impact viewers and create imagined
    worlds and desire for other lives/things and can
    create movement.
  • What is most important about these
    mediascapes is that they provide (especially in
    their television, film and cassette forms) large
    and complex repertoires of images, narratives and
    ethnoscapes to viewers throughout the world, in
    which the world of commodities and the world of
    news and politics are profoundly mixed.
  • The lines between the realistic and the
    fictional landscapes they see are blurred, so
    that the further away these audiences are from
    the direct experiences of metropolitan life, the
    more likely they are to construct imagined
    worlds...
  • (p.298-299)

20
Ideoscapes
  • These ideoscapes are composed of elements of
    the Enlightenment world-view, which consists of a
    concatenation of ideas, terms and images,
    including freedom, welfare, rights,
    sovereignty, representation, and the master
    term democracy. The master-narrative of the
    Englightenment (and its many variants in England,
    France and the United States) was constructed
    with a certain internal logic and presupposed a
    certain relationship between reading,
    representation and the public sphere...(p.299)

21
Ideoscapes
  • Appadurai problematizes global political
    communication.
  • He points out need for further analysis of how
    words and ideologies are differently interpreted
    globally.
  • He argues that global political narratives are
    problematic in terms of translation issues and
    contextual conventions.
  • ...but their diaspora across the world,
    especially since the nineteenth century, has
    loosened the internal coherence which held these
    terms and images together in a Euro-American
    master-narrative, and provided instead a loosely
    structured synopticon of politics, in which
    different nation-states, as part of their
    evolution, have organized their political
    structures around different keywords(Williams
    1976).
  • (p. 299-300)

22
A tentative formulation
  • This extended terminological discussion of the
    five terms I have coined sets the basis for a
    tentative formulation about the conditions under
    which current global flows occur they occur in
    and through the growing disjunctures between
    ethnoscapes, technoscapes, finanscapes,
    mediascapes and ideoscapes.
  • (p. 301)

23
Emphasizing disjunctures
  • ...people, machinery, money, images and ideas
    now follow increasingly non-isomorphic paths of
    course, at all periods in human history, there
    have been some disjunctures between the flows of
    these things, but the sheer speed, scale and
    volume of each of these flows is now so great
    that the disjunctures have become central to the
    politics of global culture. (p.301)

24
Critique
25
What is intellectually significant about how
Appadurai develops this construct?
  • Stresses disjunctures as missing and central to
    theory
  • Emphasizes complexity of identity by using and
    naming states, nations, imagined nations, groups
    and individual actors.
  • Provides examples of invisible boundary
    crossing to demonstrate complex
    interrelationships and transnational activity.
  • Theorizes on impact of media and migration
    moving images meet mobile audiences.
  • Addresses issue of linguistic transfer,
    interpretation and different understandings and
    suggests further analysis.

26
How does this text move the conversation
forward?
  • First, suggests disjunctures as part of
    contribution to restructuring the Marxist
    narrative. (p.308)
  • Second, broadens scope of conversation on
    global through diverse use of examples.
    Acknowledges diversity within groups, particulary
    in third world?
  • Third, suggests need for more analysis on
    political communication and linguistics.

27
Discussion questions
28
Questions
  • Is there/ Can there be/What is the nature of a
    global infrastructure according to Appadurai?
  • What other scape/s might exist or be required?
  • Other questions?
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