Our World Openly with Antoni Kalkowski
Welcome friend! Join me in exploring Our World Openly as we traverse the interconnected spheres and disciplines of Anthropology, Science, Technology, and Society (STS) Studies, Psychology, History, Politics, Economics, Philosophy, Social Justice, and others; Spheres of reality that are deeply networked through complex relationships, and spheres that rarely, if ever, exist in isolation. It is understanding these spheres together that is essential for understanding this simultaneously beautiful and weird, yet also sometimes cruel and not equal, world of ours. Through meaningful conversations that provide novel and important ideas and perspectives, we uncover the interconnected depths of our reality. This all while we maintain an open and curious, yet theoretically and scientifically skeptical, mind.
Episodes
Sunday Jul 16, 2023
How Science, Culture, and Power is Not, and Never Was, Separate
Sunday Jul 16, 2023
Sunday Jul 16, 2023
Academically, Professor Fortun understands himself as a historian and anthropologist of the life sciences, genetics and genomics in particular.
Fortun studied physics as an undergraduate at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (one of oldest polytechnic institutes in the U.S.), until he transferred to Hampshire College and switched to philosophy of science. He worked in Washington DC at the Institute for Policy Studies for a good chunk of the Eighties, before completing a PhD in the History of Science in 1993 at Harvard University. For almost twenty years he was in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at Rensselaer, before coming to the Department of Anthropology at UC Irvine in 2017. He is the author of several books including Muddling Through: Pursuing Science and Truths in the 21st Century, co-authored with physicist Herbert J. Bernstein; and the book Promising Genomics: Iceland and deCODE Genetics in a World of Speculation, and most recently Genomics With Care: Minding the Double Binds of Science, just published by Duke University Press.
In the podcast we talk about: the general intersections of science culture and power, loving and hating science simultaneously and the need for that paradoxical relationship, the science, culture and power in the Manhattan project and genocidal weapons, the intersections of the science with the military and empire, the importance of who funds science and thereby what scientific truth gets researched, the history of Darwinian evolution, intelligent design as political agenda, how politics and science are made to be seen as separate but are not, feminist scientists, benefits of diversity within scientific collectives, the reason to be pro science and the philosophical arguments for trusting science and its truth even if truth is often nebulous, ideologies of truth and purity in Greek history and certain strands of the modern physicists and mathematical disciplines, and much more.
Sunday Mar 05, 2023
Anthro of Labor: Witches, Robots, Gardeners, Domestic and Farm Workers
Sunday Mar 05, 2023
Sunday Mar 05, 2023
Professor Zárate is a cultural anthropologist who studies Latinx migrant labor and ecology in Southern California. In this podcast conversation, we talk about the dimensions of labor within our society including students as workers, reproductive and productive labor, racialized and gendered labor within capitalism, the labor of mothers and fathers, the nuclear household, neocolonialism, Latinx farm workers, domestic workers, and witches, robots and capitalism.
Professor Zárate received his Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, San Diego and is currently an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of California, Irvine. His work has appeared in Sapiens, Kalfou: A Journal of Comparative and Relational Ethnic Studies, Feminist Formations, Anthropology and Humanism, and the American Studies Journal. He grew up working as a residential gardener and fire mitigation worker for his father’s company in Orange County, California.
Sunday Jan 22, 2023
Sunday Jan 22, 2023
This is a conversation/podcast with Akil Fletcher, a digital anthropologist at the University of California Irvine who does research on digital worlds like video games, specifically the massive multiplayer online role-playing video game, Final Fantasy. We cover topics such as how video games relate to: identity/selfhood, community, relationships, economics, race, masculinity, sexism, labor in esports, Japanese Europeanness in digital media, sexual policing and homophobia, politics, hierarchy vs egalitarianism, and more.
Enjoy :)