Notes from the Residency : Notas da Residência

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(This article is written in English and Portuguese – Este artigo está éscrito em Inglês e Português) 

What’s your story? It’s all in the telling. Stories are compasses and architecture; we navigate by them, we build our sanctuaries and our prisons out of them, and to be without a story is to be lost in the vastness of a world that spreads in all directions like arctic tundra or sea ice. To love someone is to put yourself in their place, we say, which is to put yourself in their story, or figure out how to tell yourself their story.

Which means that a place is a story, and stories are geography, and empathy is first of all an act of imagination, a storyteller’s art, and then a way of traveling far from here to there. What is it like to be the old man silenced by a stroke, the young man facing the executioner, the woman walking across the border, the child on the roller coaster, the person you’ve only read about, or the one next to you in bed?

We tell ourselves stories in order to live, or to justify taking lives, even our own, by violence or by numbness and the failure to live; tell ourselves stories that save us and stories that are the quicksand in which we thrash and the well in which we drown, stories of justification, of accursedness, of luck and star-crossed love, or versions clad in the cynicism that is at times a very elegant garment. Sometimes the story collapses, and it demands that we recognize we’ve been lost, or terrible, or ridiculous, or just stuck…

 ––Rebecca SolnitThe Faraway Nearby Continue reading

On second thought…

We’d like to let you all know that this will function as a group blog. If you’d like an example of what we’re talking about, you can check out that granddaddy of anthro blogs, Savage Minds. Or maybe something like Boing Boing. In any case, we want to make this a community endeavor. So we’ll slowly be inviting people to make guest posts. To share their work and thoughts with other urban thinkers. If you think you’d like to contribute to this endeavor, please don’t hesitate to get in contact with us, once our “Contact Us” page is actually up!

First Things First

And thus begins yet another blog, another entry into the burgeoning field of anthropology blogs. We hope that this site will serve as an ongoing resource for people interested in what it means to be human in an urban context. In the process, we hope to foment discussion on what that unsettled term, “urban”, even means. And heck, maybe even a little bit about what “human” means. Please bear with us as we get things set up around here. (And in the name of transparency, please don’t be alarmed if this post disappears at some point — we just want to get something up so the site actually looks inhabited.)