Spain Unmoored -- Guest speaker about a new book

Spain Unmoored -- Guest speaker about a new book

Academic Year:
2017 - 2018 (June 1, 2017 through May 31, 2018)
Funding Requested:
$500.00
Project Dates:
-
Applicant(s):
Overview of the Project:
This request for funding accompanies a new lecture course, Anthrocul 329 / PICS 385, Encounters: Cultural Difference in the Modern World. Here is the blurb for the course:This course examines cross-cultural encounters in the modern world. Cultural difference has not faded away or disappeared with globalization; rather, the accelerated mobility of people and circulation of commodities have created new forms of interaction and demands for making sense of difference. These encounters take many forms, both within and across national boundaries. Explanations of difference may invoke religious identity, history, politics, ideas about race, and culture itself. This course draws on concepts from political scientists, historians, sociologists, and anthropologists who seek to explain these encounters and the persistence of difference, including nationalism, ethnicity, modernity, race, and culture. It then applies these concepts to a series of thickly-described cultural encounters: between people living in rural Papua New Guinea, the state, and a transnational mining company; Ladinos and Mayans in Guatemala; Muslims and Christians in Spain; people in Cameroon who invoke witchcraft as a contemporary form of politics; and advertisers in Bombay seeking to market commodities by invoking culture. Above all, this course examines the continued significance of culture and difference in a globalizing world.

I am seeking funding to bring Prof. Mikaela Rozogen-Soltar, at the University of Nevada, Reno, to class to talk about her recent book, Spain Unmoored, Migration, Conversion, and the Politics of Islam (University of Indiana Press, 2017).
Final Report Fields
Project Objectives:
This project was in support of a new course for international studies and anthropology students that discussed the impacts of globalization -- the accelerating movement of people, things, and ideas across international borders. The class was assigned a new ethnography, "Spain Unmoored: Migration, Conversion, and the Politics of Islam" by Dr. Mikaela Rogozen-Soltar, and the goal of the project was to bring the author to talk to the students about her research and the themes of the class. We also scheduled a meeting of the graduate students involved in the Meditopos Rackham Interdisciplinary Workshop, in addition to individual and group meetings with graduate students interested in the Mediterranean and North Africa.
Project Achievements:
Unfortunately, the guest speaker had a medical emergency the week prior to her visit to campus and was unable to travel. We had hoped to arrange a time for her to Skype with the graduate students in the Meditopos Rackham Interdisciplinary Workshop, but by the time that she recovered from her illness, everyone's schedules were already too full to reschedule the event. (My class had also finished reading and discussing Dr. Rogozen-Soltar's book by the time she recovered, and had moved on to other readings, so the possibility of her Skyping in to class was also moot). The ticket purchased for her travel was non-refundable.
Continuation:
No.
Dissemination:
Unfortunately, we were unable to take advantage of CRLT funding due to the speaker's illness.